1
PAR'T' 1-PAGE IB ftsmen Rush Work on Different Dioramas. BY VIRGINIA GARDNER. One of t.he busiest spots in all the , t rno vlng scene which is A Century or Prog'rr-ss exposition in the making j the diorama laboratory in IJa11 of ,c ienca building. IJere oil wells, rub, be r plantations. factory rooms, coal mines, and tropicallandscapes are be- in;:; co nst ruct ed in miniature by a slaff of artists, landscape architccts, model rna k ers, scul pt or-s, and various other craft snien. MoM of the dlo rnmas are being- I,llade for pure and a ppl ied science ex- hibils and are designed as absorbing udtes for both children and adults B'.fore t hey are ser-n by the jostling t hron 'l w htch wilJ pass in review w ith t he opening of the fair on June 1, each finished diorama i'" worked upon by nUl11l'rOUShands and lor a minimum of SIX weeks. F'rorn the Administration building Ihe visitor to apnronr-h the LlalJ 01 Rdcnce pn ssia the almost compleled Rears Roebuck building. and its srn a ll- "1' neighbor, the Illinois Host build ing, also vii-t unIlv completed, with its many windows and its sculptorcd frie7.e making the extcrtor inviting, contmur-s pa tOile of I})(' giant st eel- '" 01'1, tow rs of the Sl y ride, past the 'Tr-rrmle of .Ir hol and into the north e.nt ra nce of the massive Hall of Sci- ence. Arti~t~ al WOI'li. ThE' diorama st udio is ,." t.ered t hrough an unpa inted door. Wit hin seventeen men and women In artists' smocks nu rsue their various tasks. Onc art.lst is busy painting ihe bricks in a storage ta n k in the foreground of a large diorama portraying an oil refinery. Another man is busy making the separate trees which when stuck in plaster one against the other make a wooded cliff in the background of a coal mine. lIe holds aloft a bit of copper wire mesh, cut in the shape of R. tree. lIe di p, it in glue, then sticks it in a box of gr cen sawdust. When it is painted, and placed against its ("l1ows, it is a tree. 'rIleY are pro- jpctpd against a painted background. lIow these dIoramas-pictures in three dimr-naions , !pngth, breadth and t11iclmess-are made to create an i l- lnsorv sense of distance wn s explained by Edward J. A hcnde n. Ashendcn, a tall, thin FJnglishman, :>6 yeara old, v'ho is a gradun te or the "'oyal College of Art. South Ken sirrg- on, was brought over to this country o inaugurate the construction of di· oramas two years ago Iast 'ovember, :\IodPled ill Perscpctive. "J n ar-h diorama the foreground is ""0,1 1 d in nerspoctlve. so that it IS qilllcult to tell where the sculpturing ) ave off and the painted background begins," he o xpla ined, . Obtaininr; this llerppeetive is a mathematical set- f'.nce. As we are working largely for scienttsts, we make sure our per spec- t've is l'xnct. If we are rna king It modelof a room, t11e original room could be worl'''elolll from the diorama t~ Ihe quare inch willl exactness." • 'ot only i~the minutest care made in cr 'lting the diorama in thc studio, hut 0 insure authenticity cross coutry trip are made when necessary . .. Tllis is the way we worl-;," ex, plain d ,\ shen(lon. . One of the pro- fessors In charge of the sdence exhib· its decides he wants a diorama of a l'llbb"r pln ntation. 'l'he fair then g-pts some rubber or tire company to pay for it and induce. the company to lend it to the fair. •. 'ext n sm,l!l sl,et('h model i" made, o e \\( ('an mOI'e about. If we don't want a iree in one place, we ('hange it io nnother. The client then ap- pro\'f's it. f lIow Fi;;lIrp~ Arc lade. "'The figurcs in lh" diorama are tirot mn dA of clay. f h('n a plaster or wax mold Is mn,de of them. Then 3 pl:l~ter ca~ t is made, and they are painted. Several girls aI''' engaged in making trees, flowers and other vegtation. The rubber trees were not difficult. Some are more so. Usually we take a hranch of a real tree, make sure it is dry, _nd wiresmaller branches on it, covering the whole with gesso, a eomhination of plaster and glue, such as Leonardo daVinci and other old masters used as a foun· dation for their paintin rr Then the whole is painted. Lca\'cs are made of paper or cloth." All the paintin;;- is done withfat oil paint. which Ilas no ~hine to it. A g-Ieaming surface would destroy the effect of oii'tance, it was l'xplnined, "011I'S was the fit'st dioramastudio in the country." saio,\shenden .•. We \\ ill he able it' we ('ontinue at our pre~ellt rate to finish all those now being plannl'dbeforf' .Iune 1," It has taken Artlnr 11. Knox, arch- ilect, and his landscape paintt'r. model maker and sculptor an average of three months to make pachof the dio- ramas to be included in thp state of lIlinois exhibit. One elf'plcts the locks "t Lockport with con~idfOrable detail in the forcground; the othcr, a scene at Rtarved RoelL USED A s Reel) ditioned in Our Own Shops 4 to Select From Prices Range $395. $314. $185 and $117 PRICES INCLUDE BENCH Terms as .;ow $1 Per Week Plus Small Carrllinq Uharae WURLITZE 329 SOUTH WABASH AVE. orEN EVIEHINGS 16. >k '>k CrTICAGO 1\Joines and the Cedar rivers were I POL/CEfvlAN Ki LLS suffer-ing large damage from flood IVa, i'Jd)"'I\t' TO P"IRCHA"E ters. M~st of the floods were inthel YOUTfl TRYING TO nu.r~~· ~ lh.n 'J central trer of eastern Iowacounties. I Insoutheastern Minnesota t ho u- BRE AV IlMTO .A UTO ~:J.F.,W ¥frJR.K ~TDF.Fr sands of acres of farm lands were:" r-A.At..!~ :ll. Jf. L_,~ v. rJ .fi•._ inun~ated an,d the village of ,~0~stOi1 I Frank Barika , 33 yUILl old, 760 MiI- !1J .. ,~. :,('If I,Oi<JG AT ~1 was Isolated oy hig h water. 'I'he Zum- wauk co a-venue, saId to have been a .uM.,.;~J\;J.1Ul.~ .~ bro river at Rochester reached a stag," known auto thief, was shot and kiiled ._ untouched since 1934. this morning by Policeman Edward Hea vy down pours of rain in the Chi Hur t igun of the North Racirie avenue New Yoik, April 1.- [SpeciaI.]- cagoarea caused the Chicago rtver to station when he tried to break into a HOjJe was expressed today that Hamil. reverse its flow for ahalf hour early parleed ca r at Milwaukee avenue and t- 'Ph - ton street, one block long, which ex- 'yes eruay. e movement eastwar~ Division str-eet. StanleySy ke , 32 years , . was so slo~v,however, that the sa n i- old, 1335 Dickson street, his com pari- tc nds dia gonn lly across the two-block tary drst net reported no sewage ion, "vas seized. e~H;l-f;:lle t i act on WhICh the F'red F. leached the lake, and that the norma! P' I"' fl d 1 ohceman Larttgn n came upon,French Operators Inc plan to erect ow was rea 1 y restoredby operunr; Ban ka and Syke just artei they had ~ .'., . gates at Lockport. I smashed the window of the cal' of a model housin ; development with WINDS OF MA Dommick 05e181:i ofWoodst ock , Ill. the $$.073,000 lent by the Reconst.ruc- R C /i Hartlg an cQUed uponthem to surren- loon F'i n ance corpo rat lo n, canbe pur- l EAVE OVER 70 I del', firing' awainlngshot. They st.ar t- chased from the city for one dollar, .4 ed to run and he fired directly, k illrng DEA Banka. I the exactsum it cost the city in 1819. DIN SOUTH Hearing' the shots, several men ran Plans for the development, due to New Orlea us, La" April 1.-[ U. P,] out of a nearby restaurant, One of be startedMay 1, call for the elimina- -March wind t ha t . d t t he them, Wa lter Barika, 19 years old, 2700 ti f H ilt ttl 'ttl diffl- S '-'- roare au J. '-' Chicago avenue, looked at the slain IOn 0 arm 011 street, ...1 e 1 month left at least 73 dead, 300 injured I man and identified him as his older cu lty is expected in obtam.nsr city a.p- and property damage of more than brother. proval of the closIngof thethorough- $1,000,000 in six southern states today BROIU;N MLl.IN SHUTS OJ'."1' GAS. fare, but, inevitably there wiII be dis- Mississippi, where 42 were dead and Marion, 1]1.,April 1.-[SpeciaLJ-Gus serv- cussionregarding the price to be paid. 200 injured, bore the brunt of t he ice in Marion and Herrin was resumed again As yet negotiations for the purchase this morning, arter being off for nearly twisting winds that struck 'lIsa in eighteen haul'S due to a brokenmain. have not been, begun. Texas,Louisiana, Arkansas, Missour! _.r"<' __~ and Aln ba m a. ~: Hundrcds of farm homes were -=:iT' t?"';:Z'3t'IT==';==~~ititliIa wrecked, leaving the occupants dead, injuredor homeless. Drenching rains ~l' WE~ii.\ •• ,MP·;.jiitiWl we rollowcd in the wake of the storm, ad- Ilv ••••• n•• IIll !J!!-_"""'''''''''''''' •• --- ••••- -=IlJIiIiIlilWi!i-m!iii ding today to the discomfortof refu- gees anddanger to the injured, Communication lines stiil were down in many parts of the stricken section arid it was fearedmany more persons might ha ve been k illed or injured in isola ted farming sections of the sparsely settled regions. Texas counted 23 dead from 'I'h ur-s- day night's tornadoes, Arkansas one and Louisiana eight. Fivepersons were injured in Missouri. Y csterda y the series of cyclonic winds swept eastward across Louis, ia na, Mississippi andAlabama. In l\1ississippi 14 were killed at Sandel'S' ville, eigh t at Harmony, nine at Ra- leigh, five atLeland, twoat Belden, two at Brouk ha ven, one each at Dav- enport and Lucedale. 'I'he Louisiana toll included six deaf) a t Hall Summit and one each at (-;I·Pf'n~.d""1Jl·g ann HOn1Pf'. TRIBUNE: APRIL ARE IT'LLED BY SOUTHERN TORNADOES Ohio A so Rising; Red CI'O s Aids Sufferers. Damrtge and suffering from flood waters continued yesterday along the tributaries of the Mississippi river from Minnesota to the gulf region. In the deep south the smaller strcn ms swel led to raging torrents as heavy rains fell in the wake of tor- nadoes, II undrcds in the tornado-ftood ..rens of the southare homeless tempo- rarily a nd theRedCross is hurrying (0 relieve suffering, The relief work, it was reported. is ha mpered by high water alrnost ever-ywhere. Ri -ers Rising at Cairo. .At Cah:o, ) 1\" where t he Ohio jorn s til!' Mississippi, both rivers were con- tin ui ng t heir riSE' esterday afternoon, At Metropolis, HI.. some city streets were cover-ed by the rising Ohio and a no t he r rife of two feet is anticipated by tomorr-ow. Nea r Flva ns'ville, Jnd .. tWE'lve fami- lies, marooned on a small island, were resc-ued. At Shawneetown, Iil.. work- PI'S wprp anxiously striving to prevent bre.ik s in the levr-es. 'J'he one bright spot in 1he flood np,,"s from so uthern J11inois was the rrcession 01 the waters of1.1,e'i\'abash at 1\lount Carmel. Gov. Horner has ordered Na ticria l Guard tents and sup, plies sen t to the stricken areas neal' the Ohio. 'ehe st» te highwav departrne nt at Sprine;field, where 2.55 inches of rain f('ll in twenty-rour hours, reporteda numbcr of Co n t ra l Iilinois roads under water. The Illinois river was rising at Beardstown, but n o danger to life was rcported last night. Iowa Also Suffers. E'r-o m Dcs Moines ca me a repor-t t ha t lI,ies along the Lowa, lhe Df'" : Townsfolk looking over the wreckage of a building in Hall Summit, Le., which was devastated by the storm. WIde areas from Texas to Alabama have been swept by the tornadoes. [AClDe Photo,l PREDICTS SEVERE QUAKE IN GREAT LAKES REGION Ann Arbor, Mic-h. A 1ril 1.-(,4')- Severe l'~rtllquah"s in the great lakes rpgion a nd t he Rt. Lawrence I a Tley are alrno-it (,prlaill to come, in f hI' o p in ion of Prof. \V i lliam Ll erbe r! Hobbs, Un iversit y of i\lichiga n geolo- gi"t. Prof. H obbs a lso forecasts Rhoel,s for the lower 1I1ississippi val- ley and sou t.heaster n states. Prof. Hobbs said there 81'f' two gr(,~lf- hpllf:' 01H'l'('Iin~ 1ht"' r-arr h. along- for early delivery Your beer dealer will he gladto takeyourordcr, £01' delivery on or afteT April 7th, If he can'l, phone liS. U I Oldest and I bich moot of t h» dost ruct ive parlh'l the inter-vals are Inng er there is much q ua kr-s are fr-It , but that other areas less piepa rut ion for t horn." are no Imm u ne, I Prof. 110h1Js said scien lists can name the place-s. but not the Um~s of ••It must 110t h" aSS11JIl p d." Prof. f ut.me eart nqua kes. The ahocks, Prof. Hobhs " d... that a 1'(', ~ outside these Hobbs said, reeult from jolting mass sl!p<:ially dang-pl'ous belts are immune movemeu ts of portions of the ear t hs from ca rt hqua kox. nor that shocks outer- she ll in response to forces con. may not be qllite IlS dcst ruct ivn in stantly ad;n.e; "'i' hin. such pla r-cs. OnF'r-b. 5, J 66:1, one of the g-rf'·'t parthqllakros st ruc-k alar;>;" i.art of t ~l. J .nwre nce va'lle y, and in 1 LI t he 101'fOr Jl,lississippi va llev , as rocked by a major art hqu.rke. 'I'hree-quarte rs of a «enturv later came thf' fairly severe Charleston eal'lhflllaKf' on the At lan t ln seaboa rrl. .• \Yhprp ('l;'I·lhqll:l.hi"~ 11;:\\(1: hf'Pll Il.p\ "ill ~11('lv '-01110 aca in. ;.:I11n if Two Rob Wyoming Bank and E cape with $20,000 Gl'ep)))'i ver, \~ .\'0" April 1. - (JP) - Two g unmen held up the J!'irst ~.a- t iorial ba n k here aft er cIostng hours t oda y And PS('(lPPcl '.•. ·jth loor nffici:llR ('~Iinl~l"'d Fit ~-ln.n(ln. rfroewen {Pritt T HE U lited States Brewery stands right \\here it did fifty-eight years ago. It supplied fine beers to exclusive cluhs, ~e- lcct hotels, conserva1.ive restaurants, dis- tinguished hornes. It became Chicago's quality brewery and is today the olde, t operating in'ewer)' in Chi<>ago.These fine old bre\~s are here again-will be available to the public on and after April 7. 1 Iany re<>allthe cIear pale Rhpingolc1 fla\oOJ'cdwith iJnported bOfls-the sligh tIl darkf'r Sat;oy Special-and Loeu:en Brall, the "Lion Bl'ew," a special darI, beer. \nd luany who were frail now rerncmb<>r the retnrn of health that ('arne ,dth lYe1.c Life Malt Tonic. Everything inside this famous brp'wf'r) is bright and spotless. The bre\\ cry has heen l•. ept in order for the new day. Our facilities and equipment for properly aging beer are stde tly modern, \\hich in.ures the finest quality-QUALITY BEER l fADE OLJR REPUTATION. A famous bl'e'\'master is making right Telephones 19:13. now the grand old BEEH Sour pllI'ellts lmed-Rheingol<i. SU1;OY Spedal, Loewen IJrall and New L~f(J Molt Tonic with its old time strength and vigor. We wiJlllot compromise with Q rA LITY . Wc "dll not hurry our brews. Proper aging is bac}•. of everyone of our products. For Ql'.ALIT ' is our watcll'wor·d. The demand fOI' good beer is so great t 1 at we precli<:ta shm'tage very soon. This sh "tage will last Ilutil heel' that is being made no,,' can pr()p~rl~ age. During the ~hortage thel'f' will probabl~ be inferior beer on the market. Because of the deluand for our produ<>ts ,~e know that we will shortly be oversold .... But our customers have"our unquali- fied pledge that no inferior 01' under-aged be r ,\ill e"cr hc~sold by this conlpany. On and after April 7 you will find our four falTIous beers in exclusive clubs. the hettcr botels. the finer restaurant!" and in the be"'t of homei"'. Asl, (01· our brands and be sure of the real thing. HUMbolat 0080 Address 25 9 Elston Avenue STATES B ING largest Operating Brewery In Chicago .. co p y • for Over 50 Yeors .. --_ •. _---- ._---- ---,-- &2& ,& ('opyriqld, 19~.f. by A. P. C.,IUQ. ERVI pp s Yon can get here, in time for the 7th, anything and everything you may need for the service of beer and light wines. Our line of buffet supplies is the largest and most complete in the country, It includes glass- ware of every kind and description ..• bar accessories, novelty boxes, coolers, faucets,taps, beer pumps, hose, fittings •.. service items such as shakers, juice ex- lraclors, Irays, aLlendants' coals and aprons, beer pads, bar wipers, toweling, ele" etc. We carry large stocks on hand so that you may be assured of prompt delivery. In the "good old days" we were recognized throughout America as the leading buffet and bar supply house. Today, with the return of beer and light wine, we are once again fully organized to take cat'e of your every requirement in this line, You can find here the newest itetllS and all the latest improvements. You can buy here at a saYing and wilh an absolute confidence in the quality of the goods yon arc getting. H:Ave You a COP'l of 0/11' New Cc;hllog of Bdfef Supplies? Our new BuffelSupply Cal::log-just off the pre". -"oHiains the1l1ost ('oHlplele grouping of buffet, supplies in the country. It is filled from co~er to cover wilh everything you tllay need in equipment 'md supplies for the service of heel' and light wines. You should have a "opyas " constant guide in huy- inr:':' your I'crynircmen!'5. A~;k for your t~Op~y today -it is sent on rcquest only. VISIT OUR DiSPLAY ROOMS OR. P!10ne BOULEVARD 2100 FOR ONE Of OUR SALESMEN AI~BERT AMERICA'S FOREMOST SUPPLY HOUSE 1200 West 35th Street Take the Kenwood "L" or any north and south street car to 35th Street. The 35th Street car stops right at our door, just west of Racine Ave. There is plenty of parking space for autos. ~~~;:!i~~J--~ _G»~_I .~

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Page 1: s rfroewen {Prittarchive.lib.msu.edu/DMC/tribune/trib04021933/trib04021933016.pdfPAR'T' 1-PAGE I B ftsmen RushWork on Different Dioramas. BY VIRGINIA GARDNER. •One of t.he busiest

PAR'T' 1-PAGE

I B

ftsmen Rush Work onDifferent Dioramas.

BY VIRGINIA GARDNER.• One of t.he busiest spots in all the, t rno vln g scene which is A Centuryor Prog'rr-ss exposition in the makingj the diorama laboratory in IJa11 of, c ienca building. IJere oil wells, rub,be r plantations. factory rooms, coalmines, and tropical landscapes are be-in;:; co nst ruct ed in miniature by aslaff of artists, landscape architccts,model rna ker s, scul pt or-s, and variousother craft snien.MoM of the dlo rnma s are being-

I,llade for pure and a ppl ied science ex-hibils and are designed as absorbingudtes for both children a nd adults

B'.fore t hey are ser-n by the jostlingt h ron 'l w htch wilJ pass in revieww ith t he opening of the fair on June1, each finished diorama i'" workedupon by nUl11l'rOUShands and lor aminimum of SIX weeks.F'rorn the Administration building

Ihe visitor to apnronr-h the LlalJ 01Rdcnce pn ssia the almost compleledRears Roebuck building. and its srn a ll-"1' neighbor, the Illinois Host building, also vii-t un Ilv completed, with itsmany windows and its sculptorcdfrie7.e making the extcrtor inviting,contmur-s pa tOile of I})(' giant st eel-'" 01'1, tow rs of the Sl y ride, past the'Tr-rrmle of .Ir hol and into the northe.nt ra nce of the massive Hall of Sci-ence.

Arti~t~ al WOI'li.

ThE' diorama st udio is ,." t.eredthro ug h an unpa inted door. Wit hi nseventeen men and women In artists'smocks nu rsue their various tasks.Onc art.lst is busy painting ihe bricksin a storage ta n k in the foregroundof a large diorama portraying an oilrefinery.Another man is busy making the

separate trees which when stuck inplaster one against the other make awooded cliff in the background of acoal mine. lIe holds aloft a bit ofcopper wire mesh, cut in the shape ofR. tree. lIe di p , it in glue, then sticksit in a box of gr cen sawdust. Whenit is painted, and placed against its("l1ows, it is a tree. 'rIleY are pro-jpctpd against a painted background.lIow these dIoramas-pictures in

three dimr-naions , !pngth, breadth andt11iclmess-are made to create an il-lnsorv sense of distance wn s explainedby Edward J. A hcnde n.Ashendcn, a tall, thin FJnglishman,

:>6 yeara old, v'ho is a gr adun te or the"'oyal College of Art. South Ken sirrg-on, was brought over to this countryo inaugurate the construction of di·oramas two years ago Iast 'ovember,

:\IodPled ill Perscpctive." Jn ar-h diorama the foreground is

""0,1 1 d in nerspoctlve. so that it IS

qilllcult to tell where the sculpturing) ave off and the painted backgroundbegins," he oxpla ined, •. Obtaininr;this llerppeetive is a mathematical set-f'.nce. As we are working largely forscienttsts, we make sure our per spec-t've is l'xnct. If we are rna king It

model of a room, t11e original roomcould be worl'''el olll from the dioramat~ Ihe quare inch willl exactness."• 'ot only i~ the minutest care made

in cr 'lting the diorama in thc studio,hut 0 insure authenticity cross coun·try trip are made when necessary ... Tllis is the way we worl-;," ex,

plain d ,\ shen(lon. . One of the pro-fessors In charge of the sdence exhib·its decides he wants a diorama of al'llbb"r pln ntation. 'l'he fair then g-ptssome rubber or tire company to payfor it and induce. the company to lendit to the fair.•. 'ext n sm,l!l sl,et('h model i" made,

o e \\( ('an mOI'e about. If we don'twant a iree in one place, we ('hangeit io nnother. The client then ap-pro\'f's it.f lIow Fi;;lIrp~ Arc lade."'The figurcs in lh" diorama are

tirot mn dA of clay. f h('n a plaster orwax mold Is mn,de of them. Then 3pl:l~ter ca~ t is made, and they arepainted. Several girls aI''' engaged inmaking trees, flowers and other vege·tation. The rubber trees were notdifficult. Some are more so. Usuallywe take a hranch of a real tree, makesure it is dry, _nd wire smallerbranches on it, covering the wholewith gesso, a eomhination of plasterand glue, such as Leonardo da Vinciand other old masters used as a foun·dation for their paintinrr• Then thewhole is painted. Lca\'cs are made ofpaper or cloth."All the paintin;;- is done with fat

oil paint. which Ilas no ~hine to it.A g-Ieaming surface would destroy theeffect of oii'tance, it was l'xplnined,

"011I'S was the fit'st diorama studioin the country." saio ,\shenden .•. We\\ ill he able it' we ('ontinue at ourpre~ellt rate to finish all those nowbeing plannl'd beforf' .Iune 1,"It has taken Artlnr 11. Knox, arch-

ilect, and his landscape paintt'r. modelmaker and sculptor an average ofthree months to make pach of the dio-ramas to be included in thp state oflIlinois ex hibit. One elf'plcts the locks"t Lockport with con~idfOrable detailin the forcground; the othcr, a sceneat Rtarved RoelL

USED

A sReel) ditioned in Our Own Shops

4 to Select FromPrices Range

$395. $314. $185and $117

PRICES INCLUDE BENCH

Terms as .;ow $1 PerWeekPlus Small Carrllinq Uharae

WURLITZE329 SOUTH WABASH AVE.

orEN EVIEHINGS

16. >k '>k CrTICAGO1\Joines and the Cedar rivers were IPOL/CEfvl AN Ki LLSsuffer-ing large damage from flood IVa, i'Jd)"'I\t' TO P"IRCHA"Eters. M~st of the floods were inthel YOUTfl TRYING TO nu.r~~· ~ lh.n 'Jcentral trer of eastern Iowa counties. IIn southeastern Minnesota t ho u- BRE A V IlMTO .AUTO ~:J.F.,W ¥frJR.K ~TDF.Frsands of acres of farm lands were:" r-A.At..!~ :ll. Jf. L_,~ v. rJ .fi •.•_

inun~ated an,d the village of ,~0~stOi1 I Frank Barika , 33 yUILl old, 760 MiI- !1J..,~.:,('If I,Oi<JG AT ~1was Isolated oy hig h water. 'I'he Zum- wauk co a-venue, saId to have been a .uM.,.;~J\;J.1Ul.~ .~bro river at Rochester reached a stag," known auto thief, was shot and kiiled ._untouched since 1934. this morning by Policeman EdwardHea vy down pours of rain in the Chi Hur t igu n of the North Racirie avenue New Yoik, April 1. - [SpeciaI.]-

cago area caused the Chicago rtver to station when he tried to break into a HOjJe was expressed today that Hamil.reverse its flow for a half hour early parleed ca r at Milwaukee avenue and

t - 'Ph - ton street, one block long, which ex-'yes eruay. e movement eastwar~ Division str-eet. Stanley Syke , 32 years , .was so slo~v, however, that the sa n i- old, 1335 Dickson street, his com pari- tc nds dia gonn lly across the two-blockta ry drst net reported no sewage ion, "vas seized. e~H;l-f;:lle t i act on WhICh the F'red F.leached the lake, and that the norma! P' I"'fl d 1 ohceman Larttgn n came upon, French Operators Inc plan to erectow was rea 1 y restored by operunr; Ban ka and Syke just artei they had ~ .'., .gates a t Lockport. I smashed the window of the cal' of a model housin ; development with

WINDS OF MA Dommick 05e181:i of Woodst ock , Ill. the $$.073,000 lent by the Reconst.ruc-RC/i Hartlg an cQUed upon them to surren- loon F'inance corpo rat lon, can be pur-

l EAVE OVER 70 I del', firing' a wainlng shot. They st.ar t- chased from the city for one dollar,• .4 ed to run and he fired directly, k illrngDEA Banka. I the exact sum it cost the city in 1819.

DIN SOUTH Hearing' the shots, several men ran Plans for the development, due toNew Orlea us, La" April 1.-[ U. P,] out of a nearby restaurant, One of be started May 1, call for the elimina-

-March wind tha t . d t the them, Wa lt er Barika, 19 years old, 2700 ti f H ilt ttl 'ttl diffl-S '-'- roare au J. '-' Chicago avenue, looked at the slain IOn 0 arm 011 street, ...1 e 1

month left at least 73 dead, 300 injured I man and identified him as his older cu lty is expected in obtam.nsr city a.p-and property damage of mor e than brother. proval of the closIng of the thorough-$1,000,000 in six southern states today BROIU;N MLl.IN SHUTS OJ'."1' GAS. fare, but, inevitably there wiII be dis-Mississippi, where 42 were dead and Marion, 1]1., April 1.-[SpeciaLJ-Gus serv- cussion regarding the price to be paid.

200 injured, bore the brunt of the ice in Marion and Herrin was resumed again As yet negotiations for the purchasethis morning, arter being off for nearly

twisting winds that struck 'lIsa in eighteen haul'S due to a broken main. have not been, begun.Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, Missour! _.r"<' __ ~ •

and Aln ba ma. ~:

Hundrcds of farm homes were -=:iT' t?"';:Z'3t'IT==';==~~ititliIawrecked, leaving the occupants dead,injured or homeless. Drenching rains ~l' WE~ii.\ •• ,MP·;.jiitiWl werollowcd in the wake of the storm, ad- Ilv•••••n••IIll••!J!!-_"""'''''''''''''' •• --- •••• - -=IlJIiIiIlilWi!i-m!iii

ding today to the discomfort of refu-gees and danger to the injured,Communication lines stiil were down

in many parts of the stricken sectionarid it was feared many more personsmight ha ve been k illed or injured inisola ted farming sections of thesparsely settled regions.Texas counted 23 dead from 'I'h ur-s-

day night's tornadoes, Arkansas oneand Louisiana eight. Five personswere injured in Missouri.Y csterda y the series of cyclonic

winds swept eastward across Louis,ia na, Mississippi and Alabama. Inl\1ississippi 14 were killed at Sandel'S'ville, eigh t at Harmony, nine at Ra-leigh, five at Leland, two at Belden,two at Brouk ha ven, one each at Dav-enport and Lucedale.'I'he Louisiana toll included six deaf)

a t Hall Summit and one each at(-;I·Pf'n~.d""1Jl·g ann HOn1Pf'.

TRIBUNE: APRIL

ARE IT'LLED BY SOUTHERN TORNADOES

Ohio A so Rising; RedCI'O s Aids Sufferers.

Damrtge and suffering from floodwaters continued yesterday along thetributaries of the Mississippi riverfrom Minnesota to the gulf region.In the deep south the smaller

st rcn ms swel led to raging torrents asheavy rains fell in the wake of tor-nadoes, IIundrcds in the tornado-ftood..rens of the south are homeless tempo-rarily a nd the Red Cross is hurrying(0 re lie ve suffering, The relief work,it was reported. is ha mpered by highwater a lrnost ever-ywhere.

Ri -ers Rising at Cairo..At Cah:o, ) 1\" where the Ohio jorn s

til!' Mississippi, both rivers were con-tin uing t heir riSE' esterday afternoon,At Metropolis, HI.. some city streetswere cover-ed by the rising Ohio anda no t he r rife of two feet is anticipatedby tomorr-ow.Nea r Flva ns'ville , Jnd .. tWE'lve fami-

lies, marooned on a small island, wereresc-ued. At Shawneetown, Iil.. work-PI'S wprp anxiously striving to preventbre.ik s in the levr-es.'J'he one bright spot in 1he flood

np,,"s from so uthern J11inois was therrcession 01 the waters of 1.1,e'i\'abashat 1\lount Carmel. Gov. Horne r hasordered Na ticria l Guard tents and sup,plies sen t to the stricken areas neal'the Ohio.'ehe st» te h ighwav departrne nt at

Sprine;field, where 2.55 inches of rainf('ll in twenty-rour hours, reported anumbcr of Co n t ra l Iilinois roads underwater. The Illinois river was rising atBeardstown, but no danger to lifewas rcported last night.

Iowa Also Suffers.E'r-om Dcs Moines ca me a repor-t

t ha t lI,ies along the Lowa, lhe Df'":

Townsfolk looking over the wreckage of a building in Hall Summit, Le., which was devastated by thestorm. WIde areas from Texas to Alabama have be en swept by the tornadoes. [AClDe Photo,l

PREDICTS SEVEREQUAKE IN GREATLAKES REGION

Ann Arbor, Mic-h. A 1ril 1.-(,4')-

Severe l'~rtllquah"s in the greatlakes rpgion a nd t he Rt. LawrenceI aTley are alrno-it (,prlaill to come, inf hI' opin ion of Prof. \V illiam Llerbe r!Hobbs, Un iversit y of i\l ich iga n geolo-gi"t. Prof. H obbs a lso forecastsRhoel,s for the lower 1I1ississippi val-ley and sou t.heaster n states.Prof. Hobbs said there 81'f' two

gr(,~lf- hpllf:' 01H'l'('Iin~ 1ht"' r-arr h. along-

for early delivery

Your beer dealer will hegladto takeyourordcr, £01'

delivery on or afteT April7th, If he can'l, phone liS.

U IOldest and

Ibich moot of t h» dost ruct ive parlh'l the in ter-va ls are Inng er there is muchq ua kr-s are fr-It , but that other areas less piepa rut ion for thorn."are no Imm u ne, I Prof. 110h1Js said scien l ist s can

name the place-s. but not t he Um~s of••It must 110t h" aSS11JIlpd." Prof. f ut.me eart nqua kes. The ahocks, Prof.

Hobhs " d ... that a 1'(', ~ outside these Hobbs said, reeult from jolting masssl!p<:ially dang-pl'ous belts a re immune movemeu ts of portions of the ear t hsfrom ca rt hq ua kox. nor that shocks outer- she ll in response to forces con.may not be qllite IlS dcst ruct ivn in stantly ad;n.e; "'i' hin.such pla r-cs. On F'r-b. 5, J 66:1, one ofthe g-rf'·'t parthqllakros st ruc-k alar;>;"i.art of t h» ~l. J .nwre nce va'lle y, andin 1 LI t he 101'fOr Jl,lississippi va llev, as rocked by a major a rt hq u.rk e.'I'hree-quarte rs of a «enturv latercame t hf' fairly severe Charlestoneal'lhflllaKf' on the At la n t ln seaboa rrl.

.• \Yhprp ('l;'I·lhqll:l.hi"~ 11;:\\(1: hf'Pll

Il.p\ "ill ~11('lv '-01110 a c a in. ;.:I11n if

Two Rob Wyoming Bankand E cape with $20,000Gl'ep)))'i ver, \~ .\'0" April 1. - (JP) -

Two gunmen held up the J!'irst ~.a-t iorial ba nk here aft er cIostng hourst oda y And PS('(lPPcl ' .•.·jth loor nffici:llR('~Iinl~l"'d Fit ~-ln.n(ln.

rfroewen {Pritt

THE U lited States Brewery stands right\\here it did fifty-eight years ago. It

supplied fine beers to exclusive cluhs, ~e-lcct hotels, conserva1.ive restaurants, dis-tinguished hornes. It became Chicago'squality brewery and is today the olde, toperating in'ewer)' in Chi<>ago.These fineold bre\~s are here again-will be availableto the public on and after April 7.

1 Iany re<>allthe cIear pale Rhpingolc1fla\oOJ'cdwith iJnported bOfls-the sligh tIldarkf'r Sat;oy Special-and Loeu:en Brall,the "Lion Bl'ew," a special darI, beer. \ndluany who were frail now rerncmb<>r theretnrn of health that ('arne ,dth lYe1.c LifeMalt Tonic.Everything inside this famous brp'wf'r)

is bright and spotless. The bre\\ cry hasheen l•.ept in order for the new day. Ourfacilities and equipment for properlyaging beer are s tde tly modern, \\ hichin.ures the finest quality-QUALITYBEER l fADE OLJR REPUTATION.A famous bl'e'\'master is making right

Telephones

19:13.

now the grand old BEEH Sour pllI'elltslmed-Rheingol<i. SU1;OY Spedal, LoewenIJrall and New L~f(J Molt Tonic with its oldtime strength and vigor.We wiJlllot compromise with QrA LITY .

Wc "dll not hurry our brews. Proper agingis bac}•.of everyone of our products. ForQl'.ALIT ' is our watcll'wor·d.The demand fOI' good beer is so great

t1at we precli<:ta shm'tage very soon. Thissh "tage will last Ilutil heel' that is beingmade no,,' can pr()p~rl~ age. During the~hortage thel'f' will probabl~ be inferiorbeer on the market.Because of the deluand for our produ<>ts

,~e know that we will shortly be oversold.... But our customers have"our unquali-fied pledge that no inferior 01' under-agedbe r ,\ ill e"cr hc~sold by this conlpany.On and after April 7 you will find our

four falTIous beers in exclusive clubs. thehettcr botels. the finer restaurant!" andin the be"'t of homei"'. Asl, (01· our brandsand be sure of the real thing.

• HUMbolat 0080

Address • 25 9 Elston Avenue

STATES B I NGlargest Operating Brewery In Chicago

..

co p y• for Over 50 Yeors

..

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&2&,&

('opyriqld, 19~.f.by A. P. C., IUQ.

ERVIpp s

Yon can get here, in time for the 7th, anything andeverything you may need for the service of beer andlight wines. Our line of buffet supplies is the largestand most complete in the country, It includes glass-ware of every kind and description ..• bar accessories,novelty boxes, coolers, faucets, taps, beer pumps, hose,fittings •.. service items such as shakers, juice ex-lraclors, Irays, aLlendants' coals and aprons, beer pads,bar wipers, toweling, ele" etc. We carry large stockson hand so that you may be assured of prompt delivery.

In the "good old days" we were recognized throughoutAmerica as the leading buffet and bar supply house.Today, with the return of beer and light wine, we areonce again fully organized to take cat'e of your everyrequirement in this line, You can find here the newestitetllS and all the latest improvements. You can buyhere at a saYing and wilh an absolute confidence in thequality of the goods yon arc getting.

H:Ave You a COP'l of0/11' New Cc;hllog of Bdfef Supplies?Our new Buffel Supply Cal::log-just off the pre".-"oHiains the 1l1ost ('oHlplele grouping of buffet,supplies in the country. It is filled from co~er tocover wilh everything you tllay need in equipment'md supplies for the service of heel' and light wines.You should have a "opy as " constant guide in huy-inr:':' your I'crynircmen!'5. A~;k for your t~Op~y today-it is sent on rcquest only.

VISIT OUR DiSPLAY ROOMS OR.

P!10ne BOULEVARD 2100FOR ONE Of OUR SALESMEN

AI~BERTAMERICA'S FOREMOST SUPPLY HOUSE

1200West 35th StreetTake the Kenwood "L" or any north and southstreet car to 35th Street. The 35th Street carstops right at our door, just west of Racine Ave.There is plenty of parking space for autos.

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