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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. JANUARY rART ThHREE. 11 2111 Nineteenth street; Benjamin E.|4456 Greenwich parkway, and Robert 8. | duty training at the earliest practicable’| Cheatham, the Barclay; Edward 5 A. s Endicott, 20 Franklin street northeast; | Williams, 440 Park ro date. 3 Altiere, Army Pinsnce School, and . its of the 3rd Corps " Frank O. Swinimers. 1620, 1 streety” all Daniel C. Fahey, Hyattsville, Md.{ Other Reserve un: Washington Field Artillery Reserve v Or anlzed Reser V eS Edgar B. Franklin, Fort Myer, -vaj | Area which wi pacticlpate o (¢ 1830 | omcers will meet at the fort Mysr |Infantry Resecte, to the 320th Infantrs. 10 Columbia | Regiments will be | Riding Hall today at 9 o'clock. Capt. Lloyd 'E; Kelly, Infantry Rer | bt e A il 2 I 33“]" A ‘..: “m be mdg' Members of the 428th Infantry will [ serve, 1414 “Pennsvivaria ‘avenue, ‘has t ticipated that in vi e ¢t G. H 3000 Q st 5;‘253 ‘:yypetrr‘w commanding officer at | Mméet at local Teateve h;;gg:“;':;:fl;g; 2;5"‘""1';"!:1‘ frmghas!mm ¥, the , Calif,, Januai 4| “Paris.” and such things as Beryl Mer- the 62nd Cavalry Divieion | It is anticipal that in view of the | nue: Robert G. Hanna, stree! ‘ s from ¢ MOITOW evening. e 3 . ’Nflfgxyflfiw that wive ,'f,',,,,., cers Mra Gubbine i Three Live tr:&ll:l:!g o 1950, of which & Washing- | Fourth of July m;:ld;yt-“r;d the ‘char- William A, gl;le];tdifl.(:, fl;z‘gahun ave- | ggg{h“{;‘; S AT g L W"‘r’ o ybe el:,el!:":: loe’l'lnx:gqu-l;a m!:’:ml‘n:'u%g::?'fi vlfi;‘lm*:“;:' P 2 Ghosts.” These portrayals make the | t, e 2nd Squadron 6f the acter of e worl uris e early | nue; Richard F. A icomb, | <. i e 8624 Fiel "uesd h 5 5 move - ingway, Bromfield, Bernard slu"mmme comedy ot the mas;: Pinches and cua’:/:‘]‘:;,!. ’lshn part, qmve been approved | period of the camp. this load can |street; Willlam I. Irby, jr., 3456 Thire | Xl‘amaetrl;n: l;lhn‘oclgpm‘f‘h st Feld %:.rmmnm Resérve officers will meet | yond the ‘:"tfl"?}? '3'32‘ 14 refleved from £ad othert of like standing. pe: Kate Prices seen puny. by Maj. Gen. Fred W. Sladen, com- | réadily be handled by the Regular serv- | teenth street, and Royal A. Wray, 6920 time during the month of August, ""n"",: esdny evening. assignment to the th Engineers. €3 call the staton coming ~the Del'e| “Because of the scarcity'of equipment | manding gericral of ' the 3d Corps |ice. No more Reserve officers will be | Arlington road, Bethesda, Md. | e QUEIR of the division train Wi by il G vie seascn” and let the “bIEZEr" in"the first six months of this ente Area. Both the 306th Regiment and | ordered to this camp than can be effi- Troop F consists of the following offi- | detatled at Fort Myer at such & period | The following_Washington Reserve George Lansbury. first commissionet e 8 | prise, America in general is only half- | the 307th Regiment, a Baltimore unit, | ciently employed. cers: Capt. Richard C. D. Hunt, 101 a5 may be acceptable to the command- | officers, all second lieutenants, NAVING | of works of London, starteq mae ey he ntelligentéla have invaded cinema | a-year familiar with talking pictures. | will assist in the conduct of the Citi< | Reserve officers of Washington and | District Building, commanding: First | ing officer of that station. Such Officers been assigned to the 80th Division. are | ball games on § recent Saturday, kick- majufacture. Of course, that isn't sa¥- | Tpat half a year has worked wonders. | zens' Military Training Camp at Furt | vicinity who are members of the 2nd | Lieuts. Albert J. McCurdy, Jr.. 134 | of" the Engineer Battalion and the | assigned to units thereof as follows: | ing off for each game, ” ing that the Treult Will be entirely in- | Ang it s due to those weoks and mouths | Myer, Va., each for a ld-day period. | Squadron of the 306th Cavairy, and | Bryent street, and Walter W. Woodruff. | Medical Squadron as may desire train- | James E. Colbert. 1230 New Hampshire | Firettion. "And 1t ‘poinia emt te wiS0t ot @eveloping new Audiénce fehcliors | This is Becmurs War Department i | who will be eligible to participate. in | Arlington. Va.: Second Lieuts. George | Mcichy Squadton as may desieé traln. | James E. Colpert, 1230 New Hampahire | e ot L o 0 &% | that the producers of Hollywood are | structions do not authorize the detai) | this 1930 Summer traiming at Fort |E. Monk, 1528 Montoe street: Henry W.|to Fort Humphreys, Va. and Oarlisle ' Kansas avenue, poth Finance Reserve, e peginning of the second talkle year | facing a dangerous situation foday. |of more than two regiments. In ofder | Myer, are as follows: Headquarters— | Morgan. ir.. 4001 Woodley foad: o | e Tl PIEABles RYvaiieDOR] Fisans uteve, 5 A & most amasing fact. | ppThey are reaching out for tales by |to cover the entire period of the camp | Capt’ Edward B. Harry, 4303 River | B. McConnell, Fort Humphreys, Va.: | It e hor anticipated Hat there will | 5416 Olives- streer. end “Marsnati ot | The Chinese Antique Shop It is this: For all its 30 or 35 years | men known as the foremost writers {1t is contemplated to order the 306th |road, and First Licut. Ferdinand M. | Jesse T. Nicholas, Clarendon, Va.: Rob- | be any radical changes in the War De- | Reste, Cont and Geodetic Sutvey, botn 1502 Connectiéut Avenue of existence, motion pictures progressed | df the country. These are not sappy | Regiment for duty for the period July | Strawn, 2712 Thirty-sixth street. | ert T. Notman, 737 Fifteenth street; | partment program for the ' Citisens' | Engineer Reserve, but litile in point of formula variance | stories rthat can be bent to formula as |5 to 18, 1930, and the 307th Regiment | Troop E—Capt. Geary F. Eppléy, Col- | Benjainin H, Pubols, 1120 P strest: | Military Training Campe for 1030, and | gineers: Florian G. Miller e Chinese Furniture or audience education befare conversa- | the old-time silent product. They ar: | for the period July 18 to 31, 10930. This | lege Park, Md.. First Lieuts. Forest F.|James H. Rothrock, jr, 3020 Tilden |in view of this the commanding officer serve, Y. M. O. A., 5th Ord- |0 Art Treasures of Ancient China tion stepped in to save the day. books and plays with which the mass | will make it necessary for the Regular | Bartl, 1350 Perry plice, and Wilbur T | street; Harry A. Rule, 1207 Gallatin | at Fort Myer and the chief of staff of | nance Comipatiy: Menry G. Sheen, Fleid | b iAo o Audiences who saw Mary Picktcrd ot the people are familiar—we read | personnel to handle the processing and | Pentzer, Bureau of Plant Industry; |street: Linnaeus T. Savage, 623 Mary- | the 62nd Cavalry Division will arrange | Artillery Reserve. 033 Florida avenue, covly pluck a rose to pieces the while |a higher standard fiction than did our | the first three or four days of the camp. ' Second Lieuts. Ernest H. Daniel, jr. | land nue northeast;: Frank Staten, | programs and schedules for this active | to the 314th Field Artillery; Orme E Henty Walthall (then a menacing val- parents and grandparents. lant) made meaningful love to her saw | If producers take a meaty taie that & Gifinged moyie ‘profiuct as the years [ s highly ‘censorsble in its presentation | e —Mmmwmm«mmwwuwmuvm;.-.ua«wooowomwmmwm went on. But these changes were due by the author—I mean censorable in so : largeély to increased knowledge of far as the movie medium is concerned cameéra angles—to the varied improve- | —and make a good blah story out of ments made by David Wark Griffith | it, the studio staff may think that is in the technical end o movie making. | a triumph. and mot to a more intelligent plot| But those people throughout the treatment or a more searchingly analyt- | country who are changing thir tastes ical theme chosen as the basis of the |and their expectations of the movie me- cinema tale. | dium_since talkies came in will not In one of Pola Negri's last American- | be satisfied. Ten to one, they will have made pictures, for which Buchowetzki | réad the Q. B. Shaw, or the Heming- was imported to direct, thé villain in | wy, of the Bromfleld. So they will be the plece takes advantage of the her- | Very sensitive to any tampering by the oine’s innocent ignorance. And the | studio staff with the story. novel means chosen to reveal this was | I have just come from a Hollywood noné other than a close-up of a man'’s | theater where I was watching the au- foot, grinding into the mife a spray of | dience’s reaction to Greta Garbo's last lilie§ of the valley. It has only been | silent picture. The archaic ruses 6f doné a few thousand times before. But |thé old-timeé medium were so apparent the Silent audience “took it big,” &s they In places that the small boys in the and many a well- |Audience. who vesterday were rapt, v wiped away the furtive OPenly gave the film the raspberr:. tear. If there was an elemental charm | Without a doubt, it's going o be a to this pantomime there were also the | better movie season. The Tevues can't limitations imposed by the elemiental | become &ny bigger, even if fhe screcn crudeness of the medium. i about to become much broader. £o The main drawback of the silent was | the "better” angle ié the only one left the éxaggeration of all emotion. Or, |0 cevelop. But that development is rathér the superlative quality in which | €0ing to involve some problems. every motion had to be played in order | Problems deal chiefly with the vsa:tions | to gét over. There were no dynamics— | Of audiences in whom a definite taste one had to_go the full swing of the has becn developed during fhe vear rendulum. The sarcastic husband was | 1929. , i the bully in silent and the irritating | ‘COPYTight. 1930, by North American News- wife must needs be the shrew. | B i Stories emerged like as peas in a | Dod. and the audiences ate them up. |MINNESOTA U. KEEPS e audiences. sad to say, didn't prog- | ress Visibly to any extent. Give a group | | of péople who have not enjoyed the ad- | UP SCHOOL PROGRAMS- of popular _ | concerts and, by the end of the seascn, | Plans Erection of New Plant Twice | you will have a definite indication of | irend in taste. After five seasons there | as Powerful as Old One, 32,95 & 33,50 w a marked progression. A ripple 000 of applause may greet anything touch- Uhing 3 Watts. ing on the modern composers. Or a| MINNEAPOLIS ().—Radio broad- | 3 X meaite mom 8 symphony may bring | casting, tried as an experiment by man; | [ THere was response from the movie | Colleges and universities and then | [ 3 Rudiénces. Didn't the producers know | dropped becauge of its cost or for other | that! Audiences wanted sex. And | i i AT | foré sex. And, fafling to get sex plus, | versity of Minesia 0 O the'Unt-| ¢ R Now they wanted to laugh. « i 4 ; 55 e d fl v : N"ym et g .gg e a:d oor | pk;rn}:e(:?c;;e;:ngo:mu}‘flls l:ll:leldm; new S0 on Oul' SBCOH 001' . Garbos. And we had our Laurel and | It will have a 1,000-watt transmitter | X A s 2 .35 MOVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE BY MOLLIE MERRICK. John B. Goodell, 2712 Wisconsin ave- Hardy our Harry Langdons, our Charlie | jnat th = Chaplin_and so on. And we had Our | formee sinting, 200~ WAtt type used in iis 3 Elingr Glyns, Bess Meéredyths, Francis | The new piant is being éstablished : Ch of the H u Marfons and Doris Andefsons. We &till | outside the city limits, vgm wires ic | Olce / o se A have them. At the present time they | studios on the campus. It is plannéd Z as are (all save the first named) writ- | ¢ hi Ve ing scenaric adaptations of the plays | ° CTPPasize b and novels which aré being made into talkise Wurzburg, Germany, has decided to $5 & $7.50 A jdizlogue writer—generally recruit- | TEmove the remains of Max Dauthen- | ¥ > L ed m playwriting rani dey, the Wurzburg poet who died in S > ,,,,,";c,,g e B (Pt HiEng the o] : Were ist i-there to protect the interests of | War, to his home town $12.75 the camera and to see that the talc unfolds with the exact smoothsflowing continuity of which the talkie edium | to i8 péeuliarly eapable. And since talk- I 5 Shoes, famous for their Fashion appeal and-inherent quality. No ¥ $22.50 33 '65 ies Wil always be as much a matte i i i 4 o ichophone, there il e Reservations. All of our latest styles are included at this price. always be need for the scenarist. N ) But talk, which has carried the movie A infaft out of swaddling clothes in ec- = Bt ord-bee ‘time; has shiattéred some Of et ol Hhustons and tratitions coe é‘ 1N & P A, e - { & COStume Tuthiessly. It has given us such per- |(| Shore Dinners, $1.00, $1.50, 52, Tormnces a5 Lowiss ' Gloveer ale jn |[L_Shore Dinners, $1.00, $1.50, 5200 1,100 Pairs of Smart Jewelry m OsendOff : | Winter Styles | | Rfigsldgy'cfil 1215 G St. TheOriginal “G” Street Furrier oy Sationsl 8083 / Our smartest Winter noveltiés, including patents, satins, rep- : ; tiles in new styles and distinctive combinations are offered. 1 $2.83 Pieces Now $1 Final Winter Clearance ‘ el Quick, Sharp o | Many Selected Styles of T Sensational Sale - RED CR O S S S HOES # B \ & This famous shoe is too well known to réed any description. We S have selected many attractive styles and included them in this ® 2] i group—one of the most important groups ih this sale. One Half \ : & Less Than Half N : In OQur Fountain Room . We are looking to this sale to steam interest to the boiling point. Washington has never before had such an opportunity. : %3 ] R Sixty-eight Styles of New In our 4th floor and we also make e paying Lasy. ; - : . Clearance Three Outstanding Groups ' e at one-half price of Coats of Northern Seal (dyed Belgian Hare), plain and trimmed 330885¢ v' & 3 7e Coats of Black Pony, nicely trimmed B X : 5 W lnter Coats of Caracul, in tan and grey Saee ] G 34 Styles Were e o o $8. O Coats of Dark Muskrat, Fox trimmed : ’ These $8.50 shoes have set a new standard of shoe value for Wash- Hats : A . 7 ington. At this sale price they become outstanding bargains. You Values to $ 50 B X : will find the season's most popular styles and materials included. $5 to $10 Hats $225.00 for . . a . o s] Coats of Hudson Seal (dyed Muskrat), plain and trimmed “/ Coats of Cocoa Po:y., Fich trimmed e 3 34 Styles ere . . . s6-50 ; $7.50 to $12.50 Hats Coats of Southern Mink (dyed Muskrat) : : A Another group that has found constantly increasing favor ® i Coats of B'“'k' Brown and Gny Caracul, plain and trimmed : by é with Washington women. Patents, kids, tans, suedes, satins, s t Values Up to $ V : B : all the most desired materials in distinctively smart styles. ‘ : $395.00 for 50 - . ; $10 to $22.50 Hats Coats of Jap Mink, plain and trimmed B s = ’ o ,' : 3 ) Coats of Natural Squirrel, plain and trimmed : : 3 ' T Coats of Russian Caracul, brown and grey : Ao All Coat Flowers bimtee $OQ7 50 Mo T TWELFTH~F ST, Yp on