Evening Star Newspaper, May 27, 1930, Page 36

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, MAY 27, 1930. YES SAH, MISTAH MEGINIS, BUSINESS | THATS WHAT ID LIKE TO KNOW, HoTFOOT ! 1TS A3 il DEAD AS A TOy o 4 SvoP TH' DAy AFTER CHRiSTHAS! THE CHEERFUL CHERUB T heve 3 lot of firm bekief" s And et Iim Free to dnnge revy, mind IF SOMETHING DOESNT HAPPEN ! GEGpID LIKE TO 3€€ A LTTLE ACTION AROUND THIS JOINT ANYTHING POR SOHE EXCITEMENT? MOVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE BY MOLLIE ,, MOLLYWOOD, May 27 (NANA).— A studio with five stages. which is the| vehicle for releasing foreign-made films | in the tongues of the various countries for which they are intended, is Jesse " to the foreign talkie problem. Seventy-two pictures in six languages ‘will be .the output of this studio for foreign market during the coming year, announces, And most of these will be made in the French plant. As the various countries of Euro] e equipped with wired theaters, the! producer plans to make pictures in each | one for distribution there. Hungary, Spain, Germany, Italy and Sweden will soon ready, according to Lasky, who has made an intensive study of the for- eign film situation. Otis Skinner, newly arrived in movie- | fand, completes a cycle of famous names which has in the past month reached | its zenith. Never since the founding of | this entertainment center have so many of the earth’s illustrious men of letters and actors of note found their way to| gelatinland. ‘Will Durant, Theodore Dreiser, Max- Wwell Anderson, W. E. Woodward, Ach-| med Abdullah, Frederick Lonsdale and others of like attainments have been colony members during the last 30 days. A pleture isn't considered much these days unless a few very lamous names find their way into the Ye : fl;unt}.huc the literati et only years ago terat of .moviedom was a Hst peculiarly its own, whose members had no outside those they had tudios. included ices Marion, nore Coffee, Clara Beranger and Meredith. And in the long ago ie Mathis held the scepter in the iting end of motion pictures. And their fat salaries wouldn't be pin money compared to the prices estab- lished playwrights and librettists are tting in Hollywood today. Some of 'm have even managed to include| t dread royalty business in their gontracts. At the biggest party of the season 9| t of 10 fair ladies wore flowered chif- s, if that means anything in your e. . Simple handmade frocks, very float- g in quality and sheer, they were a startling variation from the satin and . Person of mixed blood. . Mouth of a volcano, British dominion. ‘Workman. Bull fighter. . Manage. Death notiees. Pather of Solomon. . Plant juice. Take out. Took part against another. Because: Latin. Ancient. The end. Winds spirally. Wind instrument. Clergyman, . Large deer. 1. Quter covering. 2. Terrifies. 5. Disdain. 9. Declares, in pinochle. 0. Slender spe 1. Spike of gr: DomRe - o gt page g BNSWER TO YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE. MERRICK. diamentes of the old-time movie gal. Smart shops of the newer and more sophisticated village have educated the movie lass to the tradition that the plainer gowns are the higher they come. And the Parisian creations that are billowing about Hollywood ankles at the present moment begin at $200 and climb right on up. And that group of practical jokers and jolly good fellows who make the brief leisure hours of Hollywood so {;y are finding great laugh material in the fact that Basil Woon, the lad who wrote | “Cocktail Time in Cuba,” didn't seem to know at just what hour that cere- mony ended in Hollywood. Prolonged beyond what other apart- ment dwellers thought was the conven- tional hour, the rotund and genial au- thor had a bit of difficulty explaining the varying customs in varying geo- graphical locati to a group of uni- formed ones with s on. Such things are en with a hey gnd a ho and a hey-nonny-no these ays. Hollywood She (looking up from book)—Here's the word “waggoner.” I don’t know what it means. Hollywood He (famed for his “it- mess”) —He composed g (Copyright, 1930. by the North American + Newapaper Alliance.) Labels for a Nation's People. ‘The suggestion of identity disks for all was made recently by an English coroner when he was confronted with a bafling problem of identity. He would have us like the Japanese, who disks around their necks from earry | birth to burial. 'l‘én.mnmuanduhnb-np fication is used in some nursing homes and children’s hospitals in France and America, the authorities taking foot- prints of their charges to prevent a mother from getting the wrong baby— o un n. But why should we not institute & system of general registration, with identity: cards such as we had during the war? These proved useful for many othexr purposes than those of military service. . Waved line. . Column in a Buddhist temple. . Obsolete. . For what reason: Latin. | Places under restraint, . Leaps suddenly. . Chemical used as a varnish solvent. . Follows the tracks of. . Rubber. . Infections on the eyelids. Down. . Girl's name. . Growing out. . 8mall children. . Artifieial language. . Small fish. . Small bulbs, as garlic. . Speedy. . In bed. . Jutting roek. . Obliteration. . Sells in small quantities, . Noted American author., 14. Meal. . Western Indian, 19. Mine entrance. . Submerges. . Absolutely. . Occupies the whole of. . Box with zlatted sides. . Peruses, . City of Porto Rico. . Ideas. 3 s ame. . Voluntarily aceepted punishment. . Conspirator. . Preserves in tins, . Threatens. . Spanish priests. . Large plants. Smaller, . Smooth, velvety fabric. . Unit of weight. . Those in favor. A g]hn;{.l . Greek letter. . “n“élt For even principles can be that they THERE GOES THE O\D GENERAL SMLVESTER LOBOED YO THE LMY= NO ROOM ORRY, JEFF, B HAVE TO SLEEP ouT HERE. YOUR SNORING KEEPS Me AWAKE | NO UWSE HAWANG = “TWOLDNT BE WERE WELL | ENOUGH HERE FOR “THE HeY, (T's FouR o'cLock WHEN HONEST FoLks ARE| ASLEGEGP AND POLITICIANS Have e JUST LIKE ALL YOU FICKLE MEN' THE JUDGE WEPT ALL OVER THE STATION WHEN SHEWR LEFT FOR HOLLYWOOD, RAND NO SOONER HAD HER TRAIN PULLED OUT THAN HE STARTED CHRSING AROLND WITH KENKLING Who Is GIMME. TWENY=-F1' CENT® WORTHA GREEN APPLES MOMS GONNA The Perfect Scheme. L WAL, PA, JUSEE YUH 5 GOT A SAXOPHONE LOOK IN THE CORNER RESTAURANT AND MAYBE You'lL BELIEVE YOUR OWN EVES! ns MUSTACHE AND tioATEE NAW. 1 & BORRIED HIT OFF'N MULEY BATES FER TO- NIGHT , YM eoIN' GEE- MhNBE WE ARE O. K. WERE ON TH\S LeVEE L\KE THEN SaN, BUT 'D FEEL B HERR SAFER OW | > THET IT'S AMoS AND ANDY HAVING A NIGHTMARE ! THESE ARE GREEN APPLES! IF YOU EAT THESE You GEY THE E( STAN ON ToP 0O “Tw' £l WATER - BUT Srosmv B ™ RWER'S RISE ANOTHER FOOT OR $O 3 TS LEVEE'D BE MIGHT A LTTLE GOOD 1O L§- | u w"wmmmnnmm,,u.mm I | 7 WON'T You DO THAT | WHAT 1S THe JUDCE, CONSIDERING UTTLE THING FOR ME, JuDGE 7 WELL, T'LL = ?? CONSIDER : WHO s THIS GIRL g MAVBE weL KNOW MORE LATER one or WA | EYES ARE. CARE — GE{SS " A DuKE IS A ik DUKE. IN ANY ; \TION GET A TUMMY ACHE IF YOU EAT ONE WITH YOUR, EYE® SHUT AND CANT TELL WHAT AN’ NETHER CAN MULLEY WHILE T @oT WERE GONG THROUGH A

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