Evening Star Newspaper, May 24, 1931, Page 19

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GRANTS INJUNCTION AGAINST PIEI]M[]N]! Federal Judge Files Order at| Request of I. C. C. to Prevent Expansion. By the Associated Press. GREENVILLE, S.°'C. May 23— Judge J. Lyles Glenn today filed in Federal Court here an order granting the Interstate Commerce Commission’s request for an injunction against the expansion of the Piedmont & North- ern Railway in North Carolina and South Carolina. The P. & N, an electric line, con- tended it was an interurban railway and not subject to the Interstate Com- merce Commission's judisdiction. It | proposed to extend its lines from Spar- tanburg, S. C., to Gastonia, N. C., and from Charlotte, N. C., to Winston Salem, N. C. Work Begun Year Ago. Work on the proposed Spartanburg. Gastonia extension was begun last year and the I C. C. then secured a re- straining order and asked for a per- manent injunction. The sole question presented to Judge Glenn was that of the I. C. C.’s au- thority over the P. & N. He wrote: “It is the opinion of this court that the Interstate Commerce Commission does have jurisdiction end therefore this court must grant its injunction | against further prosecution of any con- struction on extension from Spartan- burg to Gastonia or from Charlotte to Winston Salem.” Extensions to Cost $15,000,000. The extensions proposed by the P. & N. ere estimated by its officials to involve an expenditure of $15,000,000. The Interstate Commerce Commission oppesed the extension on the grounds that through connections with the Nor- folk & Western Railway at Winston- Salem and with the Georgia & Florida Raflway at Greenwood, S. C., a new Southern trunk railway would be created | in a section already adequately served | by existing trunk lines, WILL STUDY DECISION. Pecidmont Counsel Says Examination Will Determine Action. CHARLOTTE, N. C., May 23 (#).—W. S. O'B. Robinson, chiéf counsel for the Piedmont & Northern Railway Co., said tonight the future course of the electric line would be decided after a careful examination is made of Judge J. Lyles Glenn'’s decision upholding the Inter- state Commerce Commisison’s authority to halt the road’s expansion plans. Judge Glern's decision was filed in Greenville, §. C,, today at the office of the clerk of the Unlied States District Court for the western district of South Carolina. It made permanent a tem- porary injunction obtained by the com- mission more than a year ago when the P. & N. began operations leading to a connection of its existing lines in South Carolina and North Carolina and ex- tension northward from Charlotte to Winston-Salen, N. C. Mr. Robinson sald the ruling would be examined closely to determine if grounds for appeal can be found. 37 HELD IN SLAYINGS BY COAL TOWN JURY| Harlan, Ky., Panel Ends Session After Indicting Officials in Mine Row Deaths. By the Associated Press. , Ky, May 23.—After hav- ing returned ' murder indictments 2gainst 37 persons, the special grand Jury which had been in session here for more than two weeks adjourned to- day. The grand jury was called several weeks ago to investigate labor disorders which resulted in five deaths and the sending of State troops to the Harlan ty coal fields. The grand jury stipulated that all murder cases be held over until the August terms of | Circuit Court. Most of the accused already are in Jail here, while deputies are seeking | others. No bond has been allowed. Those in jail included several union officials and three town officials at Evarts, near here, where most of the‘ disorders centered. It was near Evarts that two deputies, a commissary clerk | and 2 miner were slain in a gun battle | several weeks ago. The majority already have been ar- Taigned and have pleaded not guiliy. | Seven of them—Asa Cusick, Evarts po- | Jice chief; A. L. Benson, Cusick's as- | sistant: Joe Cawood, Evarts town clerk; Floyd Reynolds and Jim Murphy, min- ers;, W. H. Hightower and W. B.| Jones, union officials—are awaiting counsel’s efforts to obtain habeas cor- pus writs, AGRICULTURE GROUP TO MEET IN KANSAS Co-operative Forum Wiil Be }{eld; at Manhattan June 8-13—Stone Will Discuss Farm Board. The American Institu ton, a forum for the discussion of | the problem of agricultural co-oper- | n. organized &t a conference here | in 1924 in the offices of late Sec- | C. Wal-| annual | June 8- | e s in Wash- ington will be represented at the con- | vention The inst which pa. supported whol operative groups tions. Its proceed are circulated become a standard tic_informatio James C. Stone, chi Federal Farm Board, one of Washington officials who will the sessions, will s, accomplishments membe of Co-oper- | source | of the| man: attend | e of the e board. Another Denman, will of Adjusti organ concerned fons Insurance Ne b 1b topics special of the McGill. and V! tion, will act as chairma Products conference on June 11 HAWKS GETS MEDAL Honored by International League ture. John ctary of the Maryland | of Aviators. PARIS, May 23 (#)—Capt. Prank M. Hawks, American speed flyer, today re-| celved the honor medal of the Inter- naticnal League of Aviators during the | fifth annual celebration of the ornnl-‘ l i zation. Cifford B. Harmon, who presented | the medal, said Hawks probably would Teceive the league trophy for 1930 in | ‘ashington. Employment in the Dominican Re- public is inereasing. THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, 3 o A MAY 24, 1931—PART ONE. * B-3S From the Front Row Reviews and News of Washington's Theaters. “Strangers May Kiss” Opens at the Columbia. T DOESN'T matter much what kind of a story is put at the dis- posal of Norma Shearer. She not only has great wisdom in her acting, but she surrounds herself with stellar players who take any story pretty successfully over the jumps. ‘Thus in “Strangers May Kiss,” the ngw film which had an auspicious opening vester- day at the Co- lumbia, there is infinitely great- er enjoyment to be had out of watching the star than there is in wondering about the whys and wherefores of Ursula Par- rott’s screen pattern, Miss Parrott, who won instant fame by her “Ex" formulas, and ever since has been trying to solve the modern and ancient marriage code, and the reasons why this age spends most of its time in the innards of speakeasies, this time beats all around the bush and finally decides that settling down to domesticity is the only thing. One doesn’t mind so much the familiarity about all this as one does the eternal preachment that goes with it. Mankind is painted fairly drearily, and womankind, rip- ping out its soul and throwing it in the face of its beloved, discovers that it is thrown back when the standards of one are set up against the other. What's fair for one evidently isn't fair for the other, says Miss Parrott, and so perforce does Miss Shearer, and so perforce must the audience— after which the story is done, and the feminine element, for some rea- son, goes out into the light bathed in tears. As the modern girl who is bent on loving a roving newspaper cor- respondent, much to the ann ance of a Boston lad who propos continual marriage to her by tele- phone from a bar, Miss Shearer tries the free-and-easy game for a while, and then trips indiscreetly from the primrose path when her lover leaves her flat in Mexico. A handsome cad, who reveals that he had a wife in Paris all the time. This man later proposes marriage when he has got- ten his divorce and then changes his mind when he finds that this lady is not as she used to be. What happens afterward it would not be fair to divulge—but the lady on our right said an audibly angry word when she found that Robert Mont- gomery wasu't going to win the lady. Miss Shearer is, as usual, quite devastating—although she should perhaps be chided for moments of oversweet coyness. Neil Hamilton is adequate as the newspaper man who finds sitting down in one place quite impossible, and Robert Montgomery, the Boston lad, says amusing lines in just the same way he says every other line—to the howls of delight from his legion of feminine worship- ers. In the shorter roles, Marjorie Rambeau and Irene Rich contribute a great deal. But as for the story—onions! de S. MEULCHER. Fine Cast at Earle Headed By Bebe Daniels and Cortez. SEVERAL smart and trusty film performers, with a . hit-or-miss plot ranging from mystery to farce, furnish continuous entertainment in “The Maltese Falcon,” which is of- fered at the Earle Theater. Headed by Bebe Daniels and Ricardo Cortez, the company assembled for the pro- duction is well endowed with an ag- gnegate sense of humor which needs cnly an audience with a T ap- preciation of the grotesque side of life to make an ideal combination. Along the beaten path of the con- ventional conflicts and murderous tendencies that follow the custody of some Oriental treasure of great value, the mystery tale proceeds to gather a miscellaneous assortment of birds of prey engaged in the common enterprise of duping each other, through a series of scenes, with unsuspected thrills, marked by great emergencies which suddenly disappear as the tables are turned in continuous rotation. Pis- tols appear and disappear in kaleido- scopic m#nner, death is a game of chance, romance becomes a soclal phase of crime and a policeman and a detective give a comic opera touch to_the proceedifigs. These things tould not happen so splendidly if it were not for the fact that the players are superior to their material, and that all of them have had enough experience in creating characters to make them count all the way along the route that is traveled by the camera. Miss Daniels arouses genuine sympathy with her mock dis- tress. Mr. Cortez may be said to have the misfortune to create one of his most striking roles without the satisfaction of being either wicked Norma Shearer. ~or heroic. As for the rest of the com- pany, they are numerous and effec- tive in various odd ways. Dudley Digges, heretofore a man of indi- viduality, is all of that in “The Mal- tese Falcon,” and has a laugh which really means business. Una Merkel, always associated with the Lincoln film, makes an office secretary a per- son of commanding importance, and Robert Elliott’s familiar conception of the wise police officer is here seen at its best. J. Farrell MacDonald aids in the creation of impressive scenes. The whole is a lively example of the play without logic, but with a large supply of the human quali- ties that destroy the seriousness of 'he stage performance at the Earle is to be commended with equal force because of the uniform strength of the four acts that are presented, including Uncle Joe Laurie, jr., with his dancing and singing “relatives”; Maurice Colleano and family in acro- batic dancing with masterful tech- nique; Vernon Rathburn and asso- clates in saxophone solos and en- sembles which reveal the possibilities of their form of music, and Smith, Strong and Lee in their spectal for: of comedy. D. C. C. Leo Carrillo, the Best of “Hell Bound.” "THE hero of “Hell Bound the new film at the Rialto, 15 a kindly gunman with a smiling soul who rides to his death in a motor r smoking a cigarette, thus insur- ing his young wife's health and hap- piness with a man to whom she should more paturally belong ma this, fairly good ith an ending that is o be noted. And Director n immeasurably illo, an erstwhile of the stage, who in his talkie debut—if it is his debut— yroves himself a genial actor and one idexlly equipped for this part. With a vocabulary, in which such colloguialisms as “You shut up your face” and “When you opened your eyes I was a gone wop” predominate, he is the most cheerful of the gun- men who Irequent the screen as muc] as they do the streets nowadays. And while he is quite up to running out of his restaurant and shooting a man, he is just as capable of proving that he has a heart that beats warmly under his steel undershirt. Mr. Carrillo is 80 per cent of this picture. Mistaking a young singer who steps off the train at the right moment for a shrew of gangland, he removes her to his house, only to find that she 1s suffering pneumonia instead of bullet holes. Unfortunately, when she opens her eyes they first alight on a handsome young doctor—stalwart Lloyd Hughes —and although she tries her best to love Mr. Carrillo, she cannot do away with her blushes for the doctor. In the end, however, she makes a superhuman sacrifice— which sacrifice remains for the ob- server to see—and gzins for her troubles & deep scar of sorrow as well as a fairly bright future, which winds up the story as well as the picture. Other than the capable Mr. Car- rillo there is Lola Lane, a blonde with a nice small voice, which seems, however, to be her own, and a suit- able collection of sinister characters who walk in and out of the film. Graham McNamee's newsreel, & comedy proving that it can snow even in a Hollywood house, and shorter features complets the bill. M. de 5. M. Powell in “Ladies’ Man,” Shown at Loew’s Palace. ¢¢] ADIES’ MAN,” the story of a # New York society gigolo, who i 1 25¢ Talcum Powders, 16¢c Choice of April Showers, Mennen's, La France Rose and Mavis Talcums. 10c Octagon Soap Powder 3 for 19c Ideal for washing and cleaning. 50c Probak Blades, 5 for 29c Standard package of these famous Limit, 2 pkgs. | safety razor blades. to a buyer. 50c Tooth Pastes, 27c Pebeco and Ipana tooth pastes, 27c each. Street Floor 30c Amolin, 19¢ The dainty personal deodorizing | powder. Mercerized O. N. T. Cotton 3 for 12¢ 100-yard spools colors Mothex Crystals, 25¢ Mothex cedarized crystals in large cans, also crystalets, the efficient in- secticide in cake form Mothex Cedarized Tablets 12 for 25c Kills moths and moth eggs. the package Stamped Bedspreads with Floss FREE, $1.00 Large unbleached stamped bed- 10 skeins | spreads in several designs. | of embroidery floss free. Warranted Dress Shields 2 Prs. for 25¢ Made by the dress shields. Sizes 2, 3 and 4. $1.00 to $1.59 Summer Neckwear, 65¢ Georgette and lace collar and cuff sels, Sweetheart sets, fabots, pancls white, and separate collars in cream, ecru and_eggshell. 59¢ Laces, 12 Yds. for 39¢ 12 yards fine diamond mesh white val laces, the narrow styles in first demand for trimmings. 25¢ Pillowcases, 15¢ each Perfects and slight quality with wide hems. 25¢ Cannon Bath Towels, 16¢c Extra heavy double-thread Turkish bath towels, slight seconds, in solid colors, also white with colored bor- ders. | 25¢ Huck Towels, 16¢c Heavy, absorbent face towels .in solid_colors or with colored borders. 35c Sheeting, 19¢c yard Fu'l 9/4 heavy unbleached sheet- | ing for making seamless sheets and mattress covers. Street Floor Full-Fashioned Silk Hose, 49¢ | Seconds of $1.00 and $1.50 chif- fon and service weight silk hose in all colors. 25¢ to 50c Children’s Socks 15¢ Perfects and irregulats of rayon “whoopee” and lisle half socks, socks and boys’ golf hos $1.00 & $1.25 Rayon Undies 59¢ Regular, extra and xtra sizes lored gowns. sets and chemises. regulars. 59¢ “Temptation” Hose, 25¢ Pytfect quality rayon hose with twin black heels. $1.00 Perfect Silk Hose, 55¢ All-over =ilk chiffon and hem service weight. $1.09. Perfect Bemberg Hose, 69c Full-fashioned Bemberg the rayon hosierv de luxe $1.25 Full-Fashioned Silk Hose, 79¢ Perfect qualify in $1.00 Rayon Pajamas, 79¢c Beautiful quality one and plece pajamas in gay natlons, i Children’s Union Suits 2 for 48c White checke suits with wa for boys and the lot ment. Forest Mills Union Suits, 45¢c | Band top, shell | Sizes 36 to 44 or cuff knees. “Susqueha.nnn" Broadcloth Shirts, $1.00 of these f received. G °, tan, blue and green All per- 0 17 Men’s $1.00 and $1.50 White, plain col terns. Perfects i standard br n br madras. Sizes 13 to 17, 50c Fancy Shorts, 29¢ Men's fancy bro elastic waistbar SBizes Men’s Union Suits, 39¢ Athletic suits of checked nainsook with elastic insert and snubber in back. Sizes 36 to 46 Men’s Rayon Shorts, 39¢ 50c beautiful quality rayon shorts Elastic in blue, pinl and_peach waistbands. izes 30 to 40, Street Floor Boys’ 59c Blouses, 39¢ Sizes 6 to 15 in broadeloth and ched collar and percale blouses. sport styles. Boys’ Wash Knickers, 39¢ Atta Gray crash knickers in sizes 8 to ; 8lso fancy English shorts with | beit;_sizes 4 to 10 Boys’ Wash Suits, 59¢ | 75c and $1.00 suits of fast-color | satcace’ ' wiste, ot colors and | | combinations. Sizes 3 to 8 Street Floor in the wanted 12 to makers of OMO seconds of | 45x36 and 42x36 cases, of excellent some double | Lace-trimmed and tai- brassiere-top_combina- fons, panties. bloomers, slips, dence Perfects and ir- lisle- 2 pairs for Hose, chiffon and service weights with French heels. two color combi- ainsook athletic Styles s 2 to 12 in fine broadcloth llar-attached nd fancy pat- egulars of dceloth and deloth shorts with 30 to 42. | loved well, but unwisely too late, which dripped from the prolific pen of Rupert Hughes a little over a year ago, now bobs up in cinema form at Loew's Palace. Mr. Hughes has the gift of show- ing up the canker sores of society, so as to make them healthily re- pellant, and when his offenders reap as they have sown, the reader finds himself virtuously pleased. In the screen version, somehow, one feels just a bit sorry for the young man, supposedly a cad, living off the money furnished by other men's wives, and inwardly, though shamefully, one rather likes him, and is sorry when justice is meted out in the end by an indignant husband. Al of which is not as it was intended in the original story, and is perhaps due to the fact that William Powell, as Jaimi> Daricott, the generosity of wife, is more con- vineing as a likable, delightful-voiced gentleman, than as a weak, con- temptible gigolo. Despite his charm, however, one does wonder—just a _little—what there is so fascinating about the per- son of Jaimie Daricott to make a feminine world lose its head about him. Nevertheless it does, and be- fore Jaimie meets with his violent and uncomfortable end, he finds himself confronted with a discon- certing problem—three women in love with him—a wealthy soclety matron, who supports him; her beautiful daughter, who proposes to him and offers to support him on her three million, when she comes of age; and a lovely young visitor to New York, whose love Jaimie reciprocates, bringing down upon his head the combined wrath of mother and daughter. ‘The original story has been juggled about a little, so as more effectively to carry the suspense. This is one of the reasons that one is more in sympathy with Jaimie in the pic- ture than in the novel, and heartily disappointed when the screen ver- sion runs true to the story, and in the end, with the assistance of the outraged husband nd father, Horace Fendley, throws Jaimie out of a 38-story window. Perhaps one’s disappointment may be attributed to the sympathy aroused by Jaimie's real love, Norma Page, who is about to transform Jaimie from a gigolo into a business man, when Horace Fendley seeks re- venge in Jaimie's fashionable apart- ment, The picture has been well pro- duced, with plenty effective atmos- phere, an excellent cast and beauti- ful costumes. The feminine cast is particularly outstanding, with Kay Francis as Norma Page, Carole Lombard as Rachel Fendley, and Olive Tell as Rachel's mother, Helene. Gilbert Emery is excellent as the | silent, outraged husband, who takes the law into his own hands, and does not arouse much sympathy by s0 doing. All told, “Ladles’ Man” is an in- teresting picture, well produced, but unpleasant. The unpleasantness of the picture is lessened, however, by the entertaining and amusing stage performance of the “All Girl Revue,” in which Miss Bobby Grice and her orchestra of “Bricktops,” reveal con- siderable skill in a series of musical numbers, both classical and jazz. Hilton and Almy amuse with strictly feminine comedy, and the Gerard California Nightingales, a bevy of young women with lovely voices, dressed in colorful and picturesque costumes, “do” some close harmony numbers, while the Chester Hale Girls round out the all-girl revue with skillful acrobatic dancing. In addition to the feature, the programincludes a newsreel picture and a Hal Roach comedy, featuring Charlie Chase in “One of the Smiths.” G.S.8. POLICEMAN INJURED 'R. V. Sinclair Dragged After Col- lision With Street Car. R. V. Sinclair, motor cycle policeman, | was injured yesterday when he was | dragged about 100 feet under his ma. chine after a collision With a street car. | the city is over $400,000, exclusive of | minori The policeman sald a car pulling | from the curb near Fifth and K streets | forced him to turn into the side of the | street car. | bruises at Emergency Hospital. He was treated for cuts and | the city were forced to y & commis= | sion of 10 per cent for 1) business. BALTIMORE MAYDR | Mayor Jackson said the auditor res- | SIFTS GRAFT CHARGE 3t il s 23 the State’s attorney. ol f’:f““i"°;?5‘1 DS:_:‘: Court pOSTAL OFFICIAL SCORED e FOR “POLITICAL SPEECH” 0l1d Administration. R Senator Copeland Says Coleman Should Efforts to De- BALTIMORE, Md., May 23.—An in- . vestigation of charges made by the city| PATtment Needing Efficiency. | auditor of the existence of graft in a| By the Associated Press number of departments of the municipal | Assistant Postmaster General Cole- government was ordered today by Mayor | man was criticized yesterday by Senator Howard W. Jackson. | Copeland for making what the New Jackson, a Democrat, who tock office | Yorker described as a political speech. Tuesday, said that three reports made | Senator Copeland said, in a state- to his predecessor, William F. Broening, | ment through the Democratic National Republican, by the auditor, Howard C.|Committee, that the post office official Beck, jr., were never mad: public and'in a recent speech had stated the apparently no action was taken. Democrats favored Government control “One of the department heads has of railroads and utilittes. admitted to me,” said Mayor Jackson,| “Perhaps,” said the Senator, “if the “that the hiring of trucks was con- Post Office Department devoted its at- | ducted almost entircly through the Re- | tention to handling the mails efficient- publican City Committee. The amount|ly and expeditiously instead of an- expended for truck hire annually by nouncing the plans and plots of ‘the y party, the post office deficit— |a purely Republican feature of admin- Other charges made by Beck were | istration—might not be so large. that city payrolls were padded, that| “These Socialistic and Communistic | many municipal employes had tele- | policies have been advocated by a few | phonies in their homes paid for by the | national legislators, all of them Repub- city and that firms selling supplies to | licans.” | By the Asscciated P D emergencies Satisfaction Since 1859 INGSPAL 810-818 Seventh St. N.W. 500 Stitched Crepe Hats Plenty of Regular Head Sizes —Plenty of Large Head Sizes THE FORMOSA (Imitation) (Imita- tion) PANAMAS come in the fashionable large and me- dium brim models. and natural. White Plain and Roman stripe ribbon bands and patent leather bands. 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