Evening Star Newspaper, January 20, 1929, Page 31

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THE SUNDAY !BS a committee to audit the disbanded THE VICARION (Copyright, 1928, by Public By Gardner Hunting. Ledger) | In the year 1935 Radley Bralnard has per- fected his invention. the Vicarion, so called because it permits eople to live vicarious- Iy by showing them complete evenis out of the past. thus far ouldistancing the eflorts of Complete Tiusions, Inc. the com- pany which then controls ail the improve- ments of the motion picture. Radley first demonstrates his device to his_sweetheart, Phyllis Norman: her fa- ther. ‘mother and brother, - Johi's sweetheart, - Carol _Gould, rd's Aunt Relief. ~While he 15 showing_them a dinner_given for a movie actress who had s man suffering from amnesia . and thoush he is e’ 15, he calls Phyllis e Brainard ‘shows a scene of Mr. Norman's ome being robbed, and then the police, who ave been looking in on a similar projec- nal, Honer, but machine in- rd in- hile 100k~ Fer nand Mortimer and “‘Jerry” ard. hea ©f Complete Illusions, call on Brainard. __(Continued from Yesterday's Star.) _ INSTALLMENT XIV. ‘Was there a human delight in seeing those fall who had been up before him? The fascination of the teeter! With all his sense of achievement, he knew that his fundamental discoveries had come as sheer accidents to him, come many of the epoch-making things to which are attached the names of men made famous by them. He was a Jittle amused at the idea of fame for him. Not that he had the slightest intention of dodging it; but he had al- ways thought of fame as something to be won. Yet power—that thing that moved him to deep thrill and blazing exultation, did not account for that sparkled in him. It was one thing 10 be drunk—quite another to be merry. Was it that, after all, in this thing he had done there lurked, as others had first claimed, though with different meaning, a mammoth joke? He had not himself sensed But these two—these twin emperors of the entertainment world— they were perfect examples of one-half of humanity in relation to the search- light of the creation. He would show them in a moment. Physically these two were delightful products of the sartorial arts; morally he presently to send each man of them sprinting for home in a barrel! Van Winkle had seated them. To- gether the three of them blinked up at him as he turned in the brilliantly lighted room to look at them. “I have not inquired, gentlemen,” he began, “just how much you know about the Vicarion and its—manifestations. Your coming here as you have, and your method of approaching the sub- Ject of control leads me to suppose that you have been present at one Or an-|them—can you understand?>—Tll give | other of the public showings. You evi- | them back their dead!” | dently know that there is going to be expected | “Have you had enough, | asked Bramard, “or shall | rehearsal of your forehanded convers | tion about dusk last night with a ch acter known around your studios as| Shadow November?” Ballard?” unit fund of the National Guard. The fund, under a recent order, is to be | expended on recommendations of a | council composed of commissioned of- ficers. The amounts given each of the | organizations by the War Department, {but which have been turned into a %c!r;era] fund, on headquarters orders, ollow Headquarters, 121st Engineers, 54 cents; . 121st Engineers, $181.65; quarters and Service Compan: Engineers, I put on a|gineers, $47.92; Company A, 121st En- | gineers, $71.01 | gineers, Detach- Head- 121st En- Medical Department $59.38: Band, 121st Company B, 121st En- $76.61; Company C. 121st |, Ballard stopped licking his 1ps and | sy | the frost about his eyes visibly thawed |\ N\ | and stood i moisture there. Otherwise | & he was motionless. | _“I might just Brainard continued, “that I have ar- | ranged so that if I should die suddenly what you call my secrets will be broad- , cast like—well, say like the ashes from | an urn! So also will any interesting | | eircumstances connected with my | | mise. Of course, as T said, I fully | pect ‘to die in my bed.” Ballard moved. He unclasped hands as if they had been locked £ ears. He got slowly to his feet. “What do you expect, Brainard,” h inquired huskily, “of men who see ruin | written for them on the wall? Do you believe in the right of self-defense?” “What's become of the men who pre- ceded you in the well known show busi ness, Ballard?” countered Brainard. “Al I expect of you is that you will follow | the procession! If you want to put a | price on Complete Tiusions studios, why I'm going to need space. If you don', it—doesn’t matter.” | Mortimer struggled to his fect —but,” he was gasping. Brainard, | | T only meant that if anything should | happen to you——" | - “Nothing is going to happen to me, | | Mortimer, on which you will have an | influence. Becuse you can readily see | | that the werld is going to be a crowded little place for the man who injures or | opposes me!” | | “He tasted the words as they passed | | bis tongue. They were a bit more the- | | atric_than he had intended—but haif | | the tarill in any experience came from | dramatizing it. | He had a sudden half-amused vision | of himself in diadem, robe and scepter —and what was the use of a scevter if | one did not brandish it! And he was | |only half amused. He had never been much given to harshness toward any | | one—but there was a pleasant tang | about ruthlessness. He was privileged | to taste that also if he liked. | “Look here, you two.” he said sud- | | denly, with a delightful sense off fling- |ing of conventional garments of re- straint, “you've headed a great monop- | oly—now, I head a greater one. I am monopoly! You've played with the | | world’s emotions—I'l Play with its | nerves and its heart. You've dealt in | | clowns and buffoons—I'll deal in the | pranks of kings! You've offered ‘em | | the fake fisticuffs of pugilists—I'll give | ’em the gladiator’s home-thrust. You've | made 'em cry with hokum—TI'll give N —_— \ Nt N _ AN S~ &\ | he three other men in the whj‘(‘(‘ 0 o de- | 7 N\ A SR N Nationally Known Drug Store Needs—Priced Much Lower! STAR., WASHINGTON, Engineers, Engineers, ~ $123.29; 121st Engineers, $796.86; Compan: F, 121st Engineers, $215.75, 29th Mili- tary Police Company, $88.41: Head- quartdrs, 1st Battalion, 260th Ooast Artillery, $68.67; Headquarters De- tachment, 1st Battalion, 260th Coast Artillery, 46 cents; Battery A, 260th Coast Artillery, $38.77; Battery B, 260th Coast _Artillery, $48.65; Battery C, 260th Coast Artillery, $48.83; Company $93.76; Company D, 121st | The program to clothe Guardsmen of the country with a new | War Department is asking of Con- |elements within an approximate ag- 4 The National Guard, it was ex- | gregate strength of 210,500. this strength ing, according to Maj. Gen. C. C.!plained to the House committee, would 'to be reached by annual increments of roll collar blouse uniform is proceed- - - oo —_— v e - - N - .. ; R T e R AR 75¢ Value Thin-Shell Filled Dainties Hard Candies 390 Pound Jar 100 filled hard candies. All fresh thin-shell candies with de- licious fillings of fruit jams, marmalades, giuts and creams. Not a single solid piece of hard candy in the jar. The entire family will like this delicious confection. Special Price Reductions For Monday Only 60c P.D. Alophen Pills . . $1.25 Creomulsion . . . 37¢ - 74c D. Company E, | so that it is do more to gress. JANUARY C., 1929— PART 2. Hammond, chief of the Militia Bureau, | not need a blue dress uniform, since the National Guardsmen when not on military duty wear civilian clothes. The great importance of improved morale among the troops was stressed for both the Regular troops and the National Guardsmen. “All Over Town” —the Better to Serve You hoped to issue the uni- form during the calendar year 1930. “I know of no action,” said the gen- eral, testifying before the House com- mitfee on appropriations, “which will raise the morale of the National Guard than the procurement and issue of this uniform.” Better uniforms for the National Guar ', which is on a steady increase, come in line with the movement to im- A, 372d Infantry, $198.30. lprove the appearance of the Regular | approved Army by the addition of a new blue|of the National Guard contemplates National | uniform for dress occasions, which the | the completion of the essential combat | forms, and some other military schools | where their own In lieu of uniforms commuta- tion is furnished, Capt. Watt explained. to submerge. country expecting to reach thorized strength of 188.01 end of the current fiscal year, Gen. | Hammond told the committee that “the With the National Guard of the its au- by the program for the development 5,000 men beginning with the fiscal year 1931." The program would be completed in 1934. New York leads in the roster of the National Guard with 19,965 men. Pennsylvania is second with 11,350 men in the allotted strength for the year ending June 30, 1929. New uniforms are being provided for ., it_was explained, but me schools, such as the the R. O. T. C. there are Harvard University where the students do not draw uni- nished. o 1 Sl e % this is where bulldog hooch got Two watchdogs were “confis- cated” by Federal raiders as material on hand for illegal manufacture of name. liquor. Medical School, uniforms are fur- A Dog Tale. HENDERSON, N. C. (#).—Possibly Underwater Cat. NEW_ LONDON, Conn. Sam’s Navy boasts the most versatile underwater cat in existence. mascot of the submarine 0-4 and is one of the first below deck at the order _— Save More CIGARS Regular 2 for 25¢ Values 11¢ s 3 - 30€ A& C, cabinet Blackstone, perjecto Cortez, siandard Box of 50 5490 El Producto, p. F. La P alina, senators Luis Martinez,r. 1. Dutch Master, cap. Robt. Burns, p. ¢. / Lower Prices on TOILET ARTICLES 25c¢ Pacquin’s Hand Cream. . . . .10c Armand’s Cold Cream Powder. $1.00 60c Pompeian Face Powder. . . . 44c Ensemble Cream, medium. . . . $1.25 $1 Wildroot Hair Tonic. . . .. €0c Pompeian Massage Cream . $1 Coty Face Powder. . . . .. 75¢ Houbigant’s Face Powder . 60c D. & R. Cold Cream. . . . .63c .39¢ .85¢ .55¢ .36¢ 35c¢ Frostilla Lotion. . . . ......19¢c its (#).—Uncle She is guite 8 lot of publicity about the things | Py T images in stone. hat are shown—publicly. But what I|prainard for an instant came back, as | &m going to show you here I suggest | with the afterbreath of a swift gestur, that we keep just among ourselves. | the thrill of awe, almost of terror, that They continued to blink at him. He | he had known when he had first looked threw his switches. The white room | through the door he had opened into was plunged in darkness, then aflame | the back halls of Time. Then laughter with red light. And then, a dozen feet | welled up in him again. from where Ferdinand Mortimer's cigar | * “That's all, I think,” he ended. ! 50c Pebeco Tooth Paste. . . ....29¢ 50c Java Face Powder. . . .....33c 50c Jergen’s Skin Lotion. . . . . . .35¢ 65¢ Stacomb Liquid. . . . .. 42¢ .21 .19¢ .50¢ .39¢ .33¢ 18100 Lysol . ......64¢ 75c Baume Analgesique . 43¢ 30c Kolynos Dental Cream. . . . 20c Laco Castile Soap, 3 for. 50c Orphos Tooth Paste. . . D A wind-proof powder, clinging, adhesive and mellow in tone. It gives your skin a transparent SN 50c Palmolive was once more going out, another Perdinand Mortimer suddenly sat smok- ing furiously! A half-dozen paces from ‘where on€ Jerry Ballard reclined silent in his chair, another Jerry Ballard paced the floor talking tremendously! “You'll excuse me—I'm much occupied.” And he walked out of the white room and left them there. (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) A N Shampoo . 27¢ $1.00 Azurea Face Powder @]¢ effect; rich, soft and deep; a beauty unsuspected. You will realize what lovely skin you really have when you use this delightful powder. 50c Mavis Talcum Powder. . 60c Djer-Kiss Face Powder . . 50c Mulsified Shampoo. . . . 30c Lyons Tooth Powder. . 35¢c Corega, small. . . . .. 50¢ Elcaya Creams. . ... 25¢ J. & J. Taleum. . . .. .24¢ .39¢ Melba Lov'Me Face Powder. . . . 75¢ And both, who were here apparently comfortably ensconced as guests in Radley Brainard’s studio, were there, almost within arm's reach, extremely | uncomfortably closeted in their owa extremely private office! And that office, so private that it had probably never been photographed, and buried deep and difficult to access a mile back among Complete Illusions studios, was here miraculously fitted with an open end to an open end of Brainard's little trick room, its floor on a level with his floor, its tobacco smoke trailing actually out here to the nostrils of a smoker who could not re- member to smoke! Brainard heard Mortimer's gurgle— death-rattle of a dying monopolist! Then he listened, as he had last night listened to another condensation of this event. ¢ “I tell you, Mort,” Ballard proclaimed —back there, 20-odd hours ago, in yes- terday's assurance of privacy—"I teil you, young Brainard may not know it yet, but he has us for the mere cracker of his little toy whip. When he swings it we'll snap! The $150,000,000 invested in Complete Illusions isn't go- ing to be a grain of sand on his pri- wate beach! “The worid is going to beg him to Rake its money. Three months from to- morrow's public exhibitions of his ‘Vi- carion’ they will be making pilgrimages here from Russia and Hindustan and Patagonia and Arkansas! The oniy hope for us on this little green earth is that Brainard’s a fool and doesn’t know what he's got. If he does, we might as well touch a match to Com- plete Illusions studios tonight—and ison off our stock company—they'll & no further use to us, nor to the rest of the world!” On the broad brow of yesterday's Mortimer, who had never perspired ™ public in his life, stood the plain pweat of yesterday's privacy. “Now, now, Ballard!” he protested. “There's a way to handle Brainard. There always is. If its not money, there are other things men want. And # we can’t procure for him just—-' “Don’'t talk about procuring! Don't you see, the man can take what he wants? wants it, wherever it is! it away from anybo you and me included!’ “What's to prevent our taking his secret, away from him? The man has to have confidants.” “They tell me he makes a con- fidant of nobody. He can take He can take it whenever he | who's got it— | He doesn’t have to. | He has only to tell his employes to | D. C. NATIONAL GUARD Filling of the vacancy of lieutenant colonel and executive officer of the 121st Regiment of Engineers, made va- cant when Lieut. Col. Harry E. Glad- man was honorably discharged by orders issued by brigade headquarters, will be deferred a reasonable time pending a decision of the District S preme Court in a suit instituted by Col. Gladman to test the legality of his dis- charge, it was said at brigade head- quarters during the week. The cad has been argued before Justice Wendell P. Stafford, on the motion of Gladman, made through Attorney H. Winship ‘Wheatley, for the issuance of a com- | mon law writ of certiorari, seeking the quashing of the discharge orders. Briefs have been submitted, and the case now is awaiting decision. Lieut. F. H. Smith, U. S. A, adjutant general of the local militia, when asked whether any steps had been taken to fill the vacancy, said that nothing would be done at this time, but that if a decision was not given within a reason- | able time that an appointment would be | made, so that the regiment could func- tion, with the aid of an executive officer. Col. Smith was asked whether any | recommendation had been made to fill the vacancy, said he was not authorized | | to speak on that particular phase of the question. However, it is understood that quarters for the commissioning of a successor to Col. Gladman. It is assumed that the recommendation was ifor the promotion of Maj. Julian S. | Oliff, the senior line major of the En- | gineer Regiment, who commands_the | 2d Battalion, who has been in the local | Guard for many years. The practice has been followed in the past of filling vacancies in the upper line by seniority, and there is no indication that a change would be made in this case. | While a decision is expected within a short time, it is probable that if it is unfavorable to Gladman that he will cause it to be taken to the District Court of Appeals. At any rate, it is | quite certain that the vacancy will not be fiiled for a while at least. | ‘Two organizations of the local Guard reached 100 per cent in their attend- | ance at drills last week, and were put in the superior classification by the brigade headquarters, according to the table made public, but the largest group of organizations were in the classifica- recommendations 'were made to head- | e A — W S— S SN\ R— SN !% S— \\w S— AN SSR follow certain formulae, and they don’t | tion of unsatisfactory in attendance. even know what results they are getting, | The two 100 per centers were the Head- as they follow them. I've already had |guarters Detachment, 29th Division two or three of them here, applying lSpcuizl Troops and the Medical Depart- - — the sweating process. You can buy what men know—but you can't buy what they don’t know! Inventors may be able to match his. appliances, chemists analyze his compounds, some- body may be able to copy some of his methods. But he's got his essentials surrounded with camouflage, and when it comes to knowing what it is all about, or how it fits together, nobody will discover that except by And specimens of that are as few and far between as mete- orites!™ The Mortimer of yesterday's reality, wraith of today's escaping gases, rose from his chair, his sheet-metal clothes falling into their original lines as if they had never been bent “I1,” he said softly, his lips privately Jear toward his partner's private ear, “if young Mr. Brainard carries his secrets in his head—wouldn't it be un- fortunate if anything should—happea to young Mr. Brainard.” The Mortimer who now occupied one of Brainard's white chairs in the Brain- ard studio—not the Mortimer back there among the gases of his natural environment—was o still that Brain- ard flung his switches quickly, flooded the white room with light and looked at him. The two czars of Compl Jusions sat gaping like a pair of masks! They breathed—with some sudible difficulty, indeed—but they breathed. Brainard smiled upon them and closed the closet where he kept his little si=c. bombs for explosion here, “Perhaps you noticed, gentlemen,” he said, crossing toward them and taking out a cigarette, “that the clock in your office pointed to yesterday afternoon at ™ | Mortmier tried to speak. He moved | gedy ! ment Detachment, 260th Coast Artillery. | The other organizations in their re speetive classifications, with driil per- | centages, follow: Excellent—Headquarters Detachment, | 260th Coast _Artillery, 95.17 and the! | Band, 121st Engineers, 82.36. | Very satisfactory — Quartermaster | | Corps’ Detachment, 75.00; Headquarters | and Service Company, 1215t Engineers, 73.99: Headquarters Detachment, 29th | ivision, 72.41; Company D, 121st En- neers, 70.15 Satisfactorv—Battery C, 260th Coast Artillery, 61.54. Unsatistactory—Company A, 121st Engineers, 57.14; Battery B, 260th Coast 1% Artillery, 56.00; Company E, 121st En. eers, 55.55: Battery A, 260th Coast | illery, 5400; Company F, 121st En- gincers, 53.85; Company B, 121st En- gineers, 53.03; Company A, 372d Infan- try. 50.00 Very unsatisfactory—Company C, | 121t Engineers, 49.20; 20th Miiitary | | Police Company, 48.08; Medical Depart- |ment Detachment, 121st Engineers, | 40.00 | Mai. Gen. Anton Stephan, command- | ing the local Guard, visited the 260th | Coast Artillery on its drill night last week, .and inspected the equipment of |7 the organization, but did not inspect the | personnel. It was said at the brigade ers that one of the purposes nging the drill night of that ation’ from Tuesday, the drill night for all line and staff units, to | Friday night, was for the purpose of | giving the gencral an opportunity for | paying visits to the line organizations on’ their drill nigh David R. 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