Evening Star Newspaper, February 7, 1926, Page 65

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GUATEMALA STOPS PAPER CURRENCY After 28 Years’ Trial, Re- public Is Now Issuing Silver Money. A new coin has made its appear- ance in the money-changing marts of the world. It is called the quetzal, and is the silver standard of Guate mala After 8 years pape: money regime, the Central Americ republic is now fssuing silver mc to be followed shortly by gold and smaller fractional one o' 'p forward in finance keeping with other developments of this most populous and perhaps most richly endowed of all the Central says the Nation ¥ “Guatemala t railroad mil v betw 1 Mexi South America, and although figures vary from time to time, the value of its ‘exports, well up in the millions, will be found each year ranking first or second among Central American countries. = ographic ses th of any count Lead ““Guatem: the Central raditional rship Traditional. place mear the front American procession At the coming of the| the region was {nhab- Mava-Quiche Indians, the most their time. 4 romance they of pads like ible 11 widesp and influenc ad req €. The Span made Gu the administr center for of Central Ame! part of Mexico, fter throwing off the country was fo npire of Mexico, pendent nation he title of the Ce Federation, embracing Honduras ador, wua and Costa Rica. One by o tes secede ‘med indej the Spanis time part but in 1823 formed, other unsuccessful several Central was made in 1921 1temal in attem Americ A tre Honduras and Sal- | federation km-\\ni Central America. | pital of Hon-| v The was short- emala today continues in with the other nations of though many co-operative especially in relation to railroads, have been the members of this ef t Latin-American family. egucigalpa, th 1dminist Jlic, howeves +he world nereements, international made fervesce Has Strategic Position. Guatemal hat of the rican ¥ bet <outh Ame: the Caribbe has to 18 th States and y on hoth | » Pacifie, it occu- »th pol, puntains near v divide its| T'he highlunds, 000 feet above the the most thickly set- of the country. The long. | Atlantic slope is of little im- | ide from the timber cutting ern the coffee plan- tations of the Coban plateau and the banana raising of the Lake Izabal re. glon “*Cof nt justly the commercial patr. mala, been ¢ velopme keep Amer with the cup that so often be said to be! 1 saint of Guate- | er potential riches have | - ignored in the de-| plantations to help | and Europe supplied | that ch i level s bufldin houses make rich return in deposits | of voleanic ash that renew the soil | 7 fertilization unnecessary. art of the chicle that goes the manufacture of chewing gum in the United States comes from Guate- mala. Banana farms in the tropical | lowlands have lately bezun to rival the coffee pluntations in production. “Guatemala City, the nation's cap- ital, presents. another example of the | gressive pirit of the country. Practically destroyed by a violent earthquake in 1917, there are hardly | any traces of the catastrophe in the | orderly, well built city of churches, theaters, clubs, shops and homes of | today H Natives Largely Indians. About 60 per cent of the popula- tion 1= of pure Indiun blood, and al f the remainder are half. the mountains of south n Guatemala live thousands of looded_Indians, . maintaining_the iitions of their forefathers. They have won the admiration of travelers | i their physique, cleanliness and | ipulous honesty. One visitor tells | of trying to buy a ring from an Indian | zirl, who refused to sell because it was not pure gold, and she did not ish to 11 a stranger an fmitation! lover finds the tropi- ands of Guatemala a fascinat- 1. with thelr dense forests ng more than a million acres. trees linked together by trailing ve i gorgeous carpet of_orchic ias, the pe-| culiar ble piantain, and | scarlet poinsettia: “The new coi the bird that is the of lib of Guatemala. The quetzal is more truly a bird of liberty than | the American ¢ for the quetzal will not even live if kept in captivity. It is still, as it to their Maya ancestors, 'a_more or less sacred sym- bol to the Guatemalians. A story is told erning the part a quetzal ayed in the unequal duel between he Maya King Tecum Uman, and Don Pedro de Alv; do, the Spanish conqueror, which was fought to pre- vent further bloodshed. A quetzal, in his efforts to aid the king, pecked at the yes of Don Pedro through the Boles in his helmet. the only vulner- able spot, as he was clad in steel from head to foot.” tiie name of national emblem : who paints in- - a United States Federal bu- yungest artist in the em- Refinish Your Car (DU PONT) + DUCO Low FebruaryPrices At our shop you can make your choice of the season’s most popular combination of shades. Every Customer a Booster Auto Refinishing Co. in | Tohannes, { Arnold, J and | 1. ¢ | represents the N THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, The Lost Battalion. Army and Navy NCWS ARMY. Maj. Gen. John L. Hines, chief of staff, will present diplomas to 51 grad- uates of the Army Medical, Dental and Veterinary Schools at 3 o'clock next | Wednesday after- noon in the Red Cross House, Wal- ter Reed General Hospital Maj. Gien. Merritte W. Irelind, surgeon of the . will make a few introductory remarks and will be master of cere- monies. The in- vocation will be { given by Chaplain John Ha)l, while ‘Chaplain McGeary will prcnounce the is penedrtion. The 1 musical program S will be rendered {by the Army Band Orchestra. The Hoss medal, awarded to the student officer making the highest av- eruge grade In all subjects, will be presented to Capt. Frank P. Strome, M. C.; Lieut. Willlam F. DeWitt, M. will be presented the Sternberg medal, which is awarded annually to the officer making the highest marks in preventive medicine. The Hoskin memorial medal, which is awarded to veterinary officer attaining the highest standing in the veterinary classes, will be presented to Capt. orge J. Rife, V. C., while the Dental Corps medal ‘which {s awarded an- nually to the dental officer making the highest average in the Army Dental School, will be presented to Capt. James B. Mann, D. C In addition to Capt. Strome, the honor graduates of the Army medical school are Capts. James (. brough, Daniel B. John P. Russell, Otis B. John M Mann, 2 sides Capt. apt. Brown, D. C., is an nor graduate of the Army Dental School, while Capt. Chaunce: E. Cook and Lieut. James E. Noonan are also honor graduates of the Army hool. Army medical granduates are: Henry F. Sawtelle; Capt. Eli E. n, Ralph L. Cudlipp, Danlel B. ust, John S. Gibson, Henry C. jarton W. Johnson, James Kimbrough, Harrison H. Fisher, seph . Martin, Harry R. Melton, ak, Frank W. Pinger, George Rice, George J. Scnirch, Edwin F. Shaffer, Richard P. Smith, Frank P. Strome, Willlam K. Turner, Henry M. ¥ Hook; Lieuts. Berna T. Bowers, Paul A. Brickley, Willlam F. DeWitt, Willlam C. Furr, Richard E. | Elvins, 'John M. Hargreaves, Douglas S. Kellogg, Stanley W. Matthews, Henry A. Roust, John P. Russell, Otis B. Schreuder and Ray H. Skaggs. The dental officers who will be given are: Capts. Joseph L. Bovd, . Brown, Ernest P. Damerson, es B. Mann; Lieuts. Everitte F. umes M. Epperly, James H. ce and Mackey J. Real. Army Veterinary School gradu- apts. Kenneth E. Buffin, Cook, Jesse D. Derrick, . Grover, Patrick H. Hudg- . ‘George 1. Rife, Howard M. Sav- First Lieut. James E. Noonan nd Second Lieuts. Verne C. Hill, Har- ry R. Leighton and Elmer W, Young. The two Cuban army officers who will ate from the Army Veterinary School are Capt. Rafael Santa Maria d Lieut. Antonio Martinez. After graduation the above named officers will proceed to the Medical Field Service School, Carlisle Bar- racks, Pa., where they will enter upon, about February 15, a four months’ course of training in the field activities of the Medical Department. Twenty-seven Army, Navy and Ma. rine Corps officers began, February 1, a course of instruction in the Army Industrial College, which will conclude in June. The Army officers taking this instruction are: Col. Frederick W. Van Duyne, Q. M. C; Lieut. Cols. John B. Huggins, M. C.; John E. Hemphill, . (; Majors Norman L. McDiarmid, Robert Skelton, M. C.; Henry R. Smalley, Q. M. C.; Charles T. Har- ris, jr., O. D.; James H. Burns, O. D.; Maurice B. Willett, C. W. S.; Bethel W. Simpson, O. D.; Glen P. Wilhelm, O. D.; Byron Q. Jones, A. Alfred L. Rockwood, C. W. 8.; Herbert J. Wild, C. E.; Keith F. Adamson, O. D.; Ed- mond de T. Ellls, Q. M. C.; Capts. Oliver P. Echols, A. S; Edward S. Pegram, Jr., C. E.; Emil H. Block, John Bigger, Q. M. C.: Jerry Charles J. Morelle, : Lieuts. Leland . Hurd, S., and Cortlandt S. Johnson, A. S Maj. Jeter R. Horton represents the lone Marine Corps student while Comdr. Frederick V. vy McNair The Inadequacy of the Army ration 1s one of the most important subjects which I8 now engaging the attention of the military authorities. Several reports have been submitted to the War Department on this subject from the corps area commanders, the quar- termaster general, the inspector gen- eral and the surgeon general, all pointing out that the economy policy with respect to the Regular Army r: tion should be abandoned if the indiv- idual contentment and the fitness of the military forces is to be maintained. The distinction against the regular establishment is more conspicuous when compared with the ration allow. wnce of the reserve forces, the Na- tional Guard, the citizens' military ‘raining camps and the Reserve Offi- cers’ Training Corps in the Summer ramps. “he average value of the soldler's ration is 31.65 cents, while that of the foreign ration is 39 cents; the average cost of the ration at 35 Marine Corps posts in the United States is 54.67 cents, while that of 21 Marine Corps — (Authorized Refinishing Station) 1724 Kalorama Rd. Col. 7163 officer, | posts outside thé continental limits of the United States is 60.09 cents; the Citizens’ Military Tralning Camp sub- sistence allowance is 70 cents, that of the Natlonal Guard i{s 60 cents, and the average cost of subsistence at the Soldlers’ Home in Washington is 36.35 cents. These figures conclusively show the discrimination which is being made against the enlisted men of the Reg: nlar Army in the matter of the ration, which, in itself, it is pointed out. is sufficient to account for the discon- tent. No objections have been. made by the enlisted personnel to the hard- ships or privations which necessity re- quires them to share, but the conclu- slon has been reached by the military authorities who have made a study of this subject that the efficlency and morale of the military establishment are detrimentally affected when the soldler is compelled to survive in the presence of Inferior living conditions, which can and should be improved. ‘Whether or not an officer is en- JEUT. COL. WHITTLESEY, com- mander of “The Lost Battalion,” is a product of Plattsburg, a Willlams College man, who, in the dim forgot- ten days before April, 1917, lived at 186 East Forty-fourth street, New York, and practiced law down at 2 Rector street, where the SBixth avenue L thunders by on its way to the Bat. tery. ";‘Xya had known the men of the bat. talion first at Camp Upton as an un- promising miscellany of youngsters, going forth to war from Fifth avenue and the Lower East Side—truck drivers, co'legians, dressmakers, sweatshop workers, actors, clerks, idlers—all the stuff of which New York is made, And, Gothamite though he is, he insists that its glory be shared with certain rangy replace- ments from Oregon who leavened the lump. He speaks particularly of a New York broker who was in command of one detachment, wounded slightly in the leg the first day, and later so out- standing a target that a German po- tato masher caromed off his shoulder before exploding, but who was always up and at them every time the Ger- titled to mounted pay while on duty as a student at the Fleld Artillery School is a question which has been submitted to the military authorities. It appears that a captain of field ar- tillery was an instructor, prior to Sep- tember 10, 1925, at this school, in which capacity he drew mounted pay for two months. He reported for duty as a student on that date, his mounts remaining at the academic stables as before. The officer concerned has ap- peared at every formation at which he was required to be mounted, but the expense of maintaining a groom for the care of his personal horses and equipment has been borne by himself, while those student officers not owning animals on the post {ncurred no such expense. It is pointed out by the War Depart- ment that the regulations provide that in such cases the private mounts of the officer will not be shipped to the new station, but will be taken care of by the Government elsewhere. An offi- cer on duty as a student at a service school is not required to be mounted, it is determined by the regulations, and mounted pay is authorized only when an officer {s required to be mounted. Though the conditions sur- rounding this care were exceptional, in that the horses of the officer con- cerned were already at the service school where he is on duty as a stu- dent, under the regulations, he is not, while on such duty, “required to be mount- ed,” and in view of these circum- stances decision has been made by the War Department that an officer occu- pying this status is not entitled to mounted pay. It is quite possible that efforts will be made to change the regulations presacribing that student officers are required to be mounted, in which event the right to mounted pay as out- lined above would result. The following named flying cadets, graduates of the Air Service Flying School, airplane pilots, are being re- | tained 'in the service of the Alr Serv- ice for duty. They are Amberse M. Banks, Bernard A. Bridget, Wallace S. Dawson, James R. R. Reid, John T. Sprague, jr., and Gilbert L. Tefft, all of Langley Field, Va., and James H. Collins, Selfridge Field, and Thomas P. Nelson, George H. Sparhawk and ntis H. Taylor, Kelly Field. It is expected that the following will be added to the list: Clinton W. Davies, Leonard S. Flo of Selfridge Field; Philip R. Love, Kelly Field, and Elmer J. Rogers, jr., of Langley Field. NAVY. Efght officers of the Supply Corps who are now at sea or duty abroad will be due for shore duty in the United States this year. They are Capt. Theodore J. Arms, fleet paymas- ter of the scouting fleet, between Sep- tember and December, and Comdrs. George R. Crapo, Cavite naval station, in October; David G. McRitchie, U. 8. 8. Misslssippi, in July; Ben D. Mec- Gee, aircraft squadrons, scouting fleet in August; Philip J. Willett, U. 8. S. California, in the Autumn; Willlam W. Lamar, aircraft squadrons, battle fleet, in August; Willlam G. Neill, destroyer squadrons, scouting fleet, in Septem: ber, and Willilam L. F. Simonpletri, purchasing _and _disbursing officer, Shanghal, China, In the Autumn. Authorization has been given by the Navy Department for the appearance of about 18 chief pay clerks and pay clerks before boards on March 15 for examination for appointment as assist- ant paymasters in the Navy. Boards {convening on March 1 will examine candidates for appointment P clerks in the N and of those who will be found qualified the appointments of 11 will be made at once, while 12 will be placed on an eligible list available for appointment as vacancles occur. The proposal that an increase be made In the age limit of young men admitted to the Naval Academy, name- ly, that they shall be aged not less than 18 years nor more than 22 years, will be strongly opposed by the Nav: Department. Under the present law. all candidates for midshipmen must be not less than 16 nor more than 20 years of age on April 1 of the calendar vear of which they enter the academy. Navy Department authorities hold to the opinion that young men should be adn.itted to:the academy as young as is con:istent with thelr ability to pass the scholastic requirements at the Naval Academy. Youths are more easily trained, their characters are more readily formed, and it is far more less difficult to indoctrinate them with the {deals and traditions of the serv- ice, regular Navy officers point out, then men of older years. Another rea- son for keeping the entrance age limit the controlling factor is that| man hand grenade throwers came stealing over the crest through the underbrush. He did not collapse until long after the relief had come. He has a warm place in his heart for three runners, one a little stenog- rapher from New York who was kill- ed in his course on the fifth night, and two others who, in the Jast hours, though the forest was as blick as Another Richmond in the Field. THOMAS MEIGHAN'S brother, King Meighan, who has just signed a five-year contract with the Columbia Plcture Corporation, was a luncheon guest Monday at the Mayflower, with his brother, Willlam Melghan of Washington. King Meighan left Washington late the same afternoon for Hollywood, where, it is understood, he wili make picture, “Sweet Rosle to the academy as low as possible, it is insisted at the department, is the serv- ice return to the Governnient. As all officers retire on reaching the axe of 64 years, there will be less service ren dered to the Government if the pro- posal to raise the age limits from 16 t0 20 yars to 18 to 22 {s favorably con- sidered. Should the proposed increase in the age limit for entrance to the | Naval Academy be adopted, it will mean that the service return to the Government of the latter named body of officers, will be two years less than under the existing age limits. Following is the relative standing of the highest of the naval vessels of the battleship class in engineering performances for the month of Decem- ber, 1925, in the order named: Arizona, Misstssippl, Colorado, Oklahoma, Ne- | vada, California, West Virginia, New fexico, New York and Muaryland Following is given the engineering performance standing of vessels of the submarine class for the year to Janu ary 1, 1926: O—4, O—6 0—3, O0—17, §—42, 829, §—47 R-—$. and ‘The purpose of the proposal to ad- Just the pay and allowances of certain officers of the Navy, it is pointed out in the Navy Department, is to give to chief warrant officers during their first #ix years of commissioned service the same pay and allowances which are now provided for an ensign with equal service; after six years of commls- sioned service the same pay and allow- ces as recelved by a lleutenant (3unior grade) with the same length of service; and after 1. years' commis. sioned ‘service the same pay and al- lowances as may be received by a lieutenant in the Navy with the sume length of service. Any pay schadule which provides that the pay of any subordinate officer is based upon that for a senior offi- cer s frowned upon by the depart- ment, although it is recognized that the act of August 29, 1916, did contain a section providing a certain parity in pay between chief warrant officers and other commissioned officers of the Navy. The act of June 10, 1922, Navy Department _authorities point out, established the present pay schedule for all of the services, abolished such parity and placed all commissioned officers within certain pay periods. In the computation of longevity pay increases, chief warrant officers ap- rointed prior to July 1, 1922, are per- mitted to count all service rendered by them. The opinion is held by the department that those chief warrant officers appointed prior to July 1, 1922, who by virtue of their service are recelving the pay and allowances of the second and third pay periods, re- spectively, are being adequately paid. Their total compensation, it is pointed out in the department, represents a substantial increase over the pay and allowances which they would have re- c;i\éed under the act of August 29, 1916. ‘The belief is held in the department that should an adjustment be made in the pay and allowances of chief war- rant officers during their first six years of commissioned service where- by an increase in pay is afforded such officers upon appointment to that grade, and that if all prior service could be counted for longevity pur- poses, there would be no justifiable grounds upon which the chief warrant officer could submit claims for adjust- ment to pay. Any proposal which will accomplish this result, it is stated, will be approved by the department. ——— Smoke from good cigars is always blue. /// 301~14-th. St. N.W. Equipped to Se , Best 8—34, R—T, | D. 0, FEBRUARY 17, 1926—PART 3. midnight, did somehow manage to work their way through to the reliev- ing force. They were Clifford R. Brown of Asheviile, N. Y., and Stanis- law Kozikowski of Mazpeth, Long Island. But perhaps the warmest place of all §s for two young privates of the Medical Department, who, in the ab- sence of any surgeon, took charge of the wounded, working with them night and day so faithfully that when the reliet came at last they dropped feebly in their tracks and had to be carried out on stretchers. To name these few is just to give a glimpse at a herolc chapter in the story of the fight which made the Ar- gonne Forest part of America—a fight which began at dawn on September 26 and did not end until October 11, when the last living German had been pushed out of the forest. By then, under steady fire from the German guns, Yankee engineers were pushing bridges across the swift waters of the Alre, which runs along the northern fringe of the woods. The Americans had moved 18 kilo- meters through an almost impassable jungle, a bewildering succession of steep hills and deep ravines covered with heavy underbrush, above which rises here and there a skeleton of a dead tree, stray remnants of an earlier forest, which, when seen in a sil- houette along the successive crests, look like teeth in a broken and shat- tered comb. - 5 But the allimportant fact is—they got ther Succeeds in the Movies. OARDS of arbitration of the motion picture industry decided 5,450 cases, involving $1,351,206, during 1925, the Arbitration Society of Amer- ica has announced. As a result the functioning of ar- bitration in the motion picture in- dustry is “pre-eminently the outstand. ing example of successful use of this means of settling trade disputes,” the wociety's annual report states. Of the 6,450 cases only 17 were taken to the courts after the arbitra- | tion boards made their awards Thirty-three boards in the leading cities of the United States decide dis- | putes betweep theater owners who | buy pletures and distributors who sell | them. Three men chosen by the dis. | tributors and three selected by exhibitors sit on the boards If th six me cannot agree they elect seventh. - | “Arbitration has been u tremendous | success in settling commerctal putes in the motion pieture industry,” | says the soclety report a Wnréefé's S‘cr:en Debur | BEN Maj. Maurice Campbell's | Self Defense,” a Golden Arrow | production is released, it will mark the | | first appearance of David Warfield on | the screen | Warfield happened to come along | Central Park West, w Y where a scene of “Self Def photographed. and { Campbell, the director {entered into the picture a scene, to his own amusement, and the | pleasure of the compiny When he had finished his sala ) |him a c he demanded sell wrote M 1 h Warfield and eck for $10 | K given the part without even Takes Movies to North Pole. ARL ROSSMAN, plorer and pl the official cameraman for the Detroit Arctic _expedit! reached Fairbanks, Alaska, where he 18 to be joined by the rest of the ven- turers who are airplane flight over the Pole. Rossman has taken with him one of the new Pathex miniature motion pic- ture cameras and-projectors, and in addition to recording his trip in films, plans to give special shows to the natives with the library film, many reels of which are in his baggage. In 1922, 1923 traveled 30,000 miles along the Alas- coast to get kan film, “Kivalina o cently rell tering at Point tion pictures which showed the actual freezing of the ofttimes incessant flash of the aurora borealls. He is plished traveler, uralist. Prior to his experlence in the Arc- Rossman took an expedition to South Africa and made motion pic- ture studies of native and of animal has made educational plc- tures in collaboration with the Ameri- tie, life. He can Museum of Metropolitan Mu New York Aquarium. Siuce How She HEN lywood were m: leading feminine role version of John First Year,” Craven, Kathryn Perry wi Hallam Cooley around in t comedy and Warren' other side of the Kathryn had been so bus) a_typical young Amer Helen in ‘the merfes that she had no time to hope for the coveted role in “The First Year,” so she didn't pay much attention t tor Frank Bor: amount of tin But Mr. Bor: mornings hi 1ore he watche he became t the girl he wante ingstone liked her the character Helen— ot 1 and proceeded ficials wh So wh the Fox Films Coast studios tetiy over *hoot! the Next in natur. q tc g thryn a test Rex Beach’ of Paramount’s (@} ducts, ‘Padlock r Allun Dw Qi finest story that pewned. In non wted alhe touched the human note as he ha: in “Padlocked.’ 1 depth, with it and theme who, surrou; is t throug d he would frame and Keep as|drives his wife to suicide and ir of his debut in the cinemas. wrecks the lief of his daughter. 1sed by Pathe. all the girls on the Fox Film lots and many others from other big studios in and around ilol- on her set al Mr. comedies well known ex- who is Drilll'*ngfltbe Chorus 2 hotographer, S QMILES, more smiles!” shouted a | man in shirt sleeves to 20 voung women cavorting on the tional Theater stage late last night ' “You've got to show life. You've got to be gay. Put pep into it. Wooden Indian stuff won't get you anywhere,” | the shirt-sleeved one continued. “Now listen,” he went on, sounds of the nolsy jazz band's syn. copation floated in from the distance. “Don't listen to that. Listen to me. I want smiles. 1 must have smiles, Smile, smile, smile!” Some of the eavesdroppers shifted |w uneasily, but, unterrified by the com- | different mand, the young women responded to the storming ‘‘cave man tooth-paste smile that reflected radiance of the o “There, that's better don't forget it.” fon, has already going to attempt an that opens here tc York a te ‘“‘Suzanne,’ here by John Cort in 1 while | moved bodily t the audience and 1924 Theater Rogsman materfal for his f the Ice Lands,” re- While win- Barrow he took mo- v this morning the ' tions. vetal chandeliers, But smile, and It was all a part of the serions bg#i- ness of rehearsing a musical comedy ight and which will make a bid for lasting fame weeks hence. which fs to be went fnt atuge took place last night r que and rectors lled with ekpest Arctic Sea, and the sald to be an ac- huntsman and nat- script. Sure i e Mrs. Cohen - the scenes careful “Two Blocks | markable eve fc Natir s Away,” and the scenario writer has|insinuated Mrs ::":lll::lgll Hflufi.i :;‘.Z | made no _provision for a Mrs. Cohen | ber of the in ‘The Cohens and Kelleys.' " completed This was the information which| Pollard and greeted Vera Gordon upon her arri- | val at Universal City, where she had | proposed to have been sent to play a part in_ “The It took less than Cohens and Kelleys,” cofeatured with | vince h George Sidney and Charles Murray. |have a_wi Quite a_facer for an ordinary |of the Jewis actress. But Vera Gordon {s no|suddenly inher! ordinary actress. She virtually made | greatly enk her own role in “Humoresque” and. [u i pical helpme therefore, she was not daunted by When the picty like prospect in “The Cohens in New Yorl Kelly Harry Pollard, the direc- [ knew that tor, was sympathetic. starter, so de So Miss Gordon got a copy 3f the ! been wover **BUT. Miss Gordon, there's no part eno for Th n Aaron Hoffman’s pl: you. d /a5 Chosen: tests for the in the picture Golden's play, “The written by Frank h aking \Irs series on the lot. in Wrot_e‘ Her Ownr Part. 1gh, there Wak'ho matic <iimahn, Cohen A Pway enacted the scepes Miw eid chowld that 48a vharacter recent] creating an wife out of “This Ls the Life!” o the fact that Direc zage spent a great SHIVERING like a leaf, her teeth, chat Irenched at Famo the other last scene ige did spend many ng her work, and the i the more conv > Miss to 1 ke Fannie Hurst story te is 1 Th oducing arrived . Borza o where day Miss Pe s "Padlocked.” showed with t deckhouse. of wat dy. At side " the Hron 3 to supply one end of ¢ igge: next sed on 1§ an will dir & clair to Ye Rex Beach has eve e of his writings | shouted Director with thos It 18 a story of unus: locale in New York country. The | 50 taking the ' 5 the rocking and rolli “Rain,” demanded rain came in torrents. Lightning,” and the ligh nding of e the PERFORMANCE REVEALS WHAT PRICE CONCEALS Only performance can tell you whether a car is built to deliver satisfaction, or whether something has been sacrificed to achieve the lure of a low first price. Low price may interest you, but only when you drive an Oldsmo- bile Six can you realize how far an automobile so moderately priced can exceed your expectations. 950 COACH ¥. O. B. LANSING TAX EXTRA OLDS MOTOR WORKS Washington Branch, 1625 L St. N.W., Main 4287 OLDSMOBILRE HI1CG ' H IN QUALITY l b & ¢ 4 1, » £ 37 LOW IN PRICE

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