Evening Star Newspaper, January 13, 1932, Page 23

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE EVENING ST AR, WASHIXNGTON, D. C., Wiu U.S. DESPOTISMHIT BY CAPITAL EDITOR {Thorpe Warns Auto Leaders. Growing Bureaucracy Is Menace. By the Assoclated NEW YORK, Thorpe, editor ' of last night told the N Chamber of Commerc may not be “on the road t but that the freedom of e is being assailed by the n that plagues democracy despotism of “And.” said 1 to predict th: January 13.—Merle Busin Automok y zen w despotism the ill_venture al bureauc- aid for e bette times for only after worse. His speech was of the automobile modore Hotel 1,200 motor exec them happy becau: attendance at the 19 in progress at Grand Central Palace. seemed to augur better times a peric a Warns Against New Just before he Auley, preside struck what he calle warning the automobile m fight a proposed Pederal cent on the wholesale price mobiles. “It is & most iniqu Macauley, “and the that can stop it constitute him: to bring the pressure of facts and expediency upon every mei Congress.” Thorpe took his first Macauley address, enues proposed to motor sales tax Ww the ‘“more than $ would be saved if th ment adopted string ures He cue from the be assailed g ism. “The great F now tells us what to how to build and fu he said Foresees “Real “The business man,” falling progressively administration. And danger.” “Is there a railroad Middle West who will the Government when are 29,000,000 bushels of wheat in St.| Paul that must be moved—on rail- roads—some time, somewhere? Tonight's dinner was the principal gocial event of the auto show, at which gate receipts for the first three days have showed a 40 per cent rise o last year. Numerous trade groups which as- sembled for luncheons, special meetings and other functions, riveted attention on_the nation's problems. Export managers of the Automobile Chamber of Commerce cdopted a reso- lution calling for a reciprocal tariff | revision by all nations to help restore | employment and bring back domestie | Pprosperity. The resolution ssserted that such | action would provide foreign n:tions | with money to pay for American goods | end lead to an automatic reduction in consumer prices without jeopardizing producers’ profits or rewards to labor. Specific recommendations will be made tomorrow. Cord Scores Lobbyist. E. L. Cord, president of the Auburn ‘Automobile Co., told 600 of his Eastern distributors and dealers that “an orgy of spending has extended into every department of government” and h our homes,” Danger.” " he asserted, “is under political it is a real| president in the dare to criticize he knows there “And I don't mzan by 10 pe; | he added. “Governmental expenses can and must be cut by 50 per cent.” | Cord said he did not believe govern- mental extravagance and high taxes are caused “so much by corrupt public officials as by highly organized, clam- oring _minorities.” “Lobbying,” he said, “in Washington and other legislative centers, has be- come & studious art and those organi- eations which exert the most pressure obtain first recognition.” EDITOR SENTENCED Charged With Conterpt of Irish Military Court I 22 WHAT HAS HAPPENED SO PAR ing, Easterner, marries Stan- d son of a wealthy Califor- mily. the train. on their weddi t, Stan appears nervous, asks to be cused while he smokes. Hours later he re- | turns—girunk bell* 'In Stan’s home hi much veiled hosti becomes Nick 1 r hat Stan proposed to her t she is a_ “spite” wife Stan of her misery, by rebound — tries to tell CHAPTER XVIIL laughs it of HIS was a strange world which Judy had dropped by impulsive marriage. Life grown complica The felt like a traveler feeling her way along dark country, following a thread of path which was visible only and there—a path where intrigue d jealousy were flung like creepers to p her up ch member of the Carter family od to pursue a willful life regard- of the others. Mrs. Carter was a into had girl m one bridge party to another. Vera who managed the running of usehold affairs, doing it with the same high hand, the same fretful com- ment as she managed her interminable committees at the country club Judy was privately a litjle sorry for elder sister-in-law. It was easy to that Vera was jealous and resentful of Amy. She had never forgiven Amy for marrying first, while Vera hersel was g into the role of the fami old maid. She tried to hide her jealousy under an air of brisk efficiency. She d flop her stocky figure back in a oulling off her heavy gloves— ent in for sport gloves and man- ¢ cut tweeds—all the time keeping a brisk complaint: “My dear, I'm utterly worn out! Two | meetings this morning, and this after- | noon I have to arrange for the Summer finals. And there's the Eridge Club supper to arrange. It's & good thing” Vera would finish with an air of sacrifice, “that I'm not tied down to a house and children! Some one ha to do the work.” This last a pointe thrust at Amy, who refused to be an- noyed by responsibility. Judy rather liked Vera and she se- cretly pitied her. In her thick-skinned, patronizing way, Vera was not unkind to_her young sister-in-law But there was a hidden dislike be- tween Judy and Amy. S0 Amy was shallow and All Way Points the WARM, DIRECT LOW COST WAY EW revised schedules cut hours from the trip to Florida and cities enroute! Most comfortable coaches on the highways, with health- ful Tropic-Aire heat, adjust- able reclining chairs. See the heart of the historic South ... Stop on the way at no extra cost, if you wish. Service to all parts of U. S. WINCHESTER, Va., $2.50 LEXINGTON ...... 540 ROANOKE ....... 595 WINSTON-SALEM 8.50 CHARLOTTE .....10.70 COLUMBIA 12.75 JACKSONVILLE .20.00 MIAMI 30.00 Ask about reduced DUBLIN, Ireland, J: ary 13 (P).— Prank Ryan, editor of the Republican newspaper and Problacht, was sen- tenced to three months for contempt of court today when he said he refused to recognize the jurisdiction of & mili- tary tribunal before which he was ar- saigned on a charge of sedition. At the expiration of the contempt sentence he will be: tried on the sedi- round trip fares ATk GRE! tion charge. It took six men to arrest him last month. +* Vitality Gon s you? e i 'DOES THIS picture e300, oy ally cause “‘tha Whats become _of yom"PEP 4 Get rid of “that tired feeling” and enjoy life again. Here’s what you need! Gone stale? Man, snap out of it! If you're feeling under par, just stop 1o ask yourself a question you own doctor would ask. Are you as “regular” as you should be? Now as it bappens, very few of bs can answer that question satis- We lack exercise, over- indulge, neglect important body habits. And as a result, our intes- tines grow weak. We suffer from factorily. Intestinal Fatigue. So if you really want to feel your Eat FLEISCHMANN'S YEAST for I!ealtb luggish intestines e? + * doctors say- ntes! b “gired” il best . . . get rid of constipation. Adopt the simple method great doctors advise. Eat fresh yeast! A food, Fleischmann’s Yeast pos- sesses certain astonishing proper- ties. It mingles with the waste masses that clog the intestines, sof- | tening them. At the same time it actually strengthens the muscles that control evacuation. Thus poison-breeding accumula- tions in the system are promptly passed off. Digestive secretion r ife High Four | [DETROTT KNOXVILLE(] Doctors Advise Fresh Yeast AILY of Fleisc e tipes—remove Poison: By e, e : Ann Forester and jealous and coldly selfish. She lived in this large, inconvenient old house, which she despised for its lack of mod- dern comforts, because it relieved her of any responsibility and left her free montbly alimons on her- | were a round of beauty | hopping tours in company | » Wilson. She and Eunice | ch other in clothes and gay parties. Eunice’s beauty was a thorn in | y's side and Amy was tireless in her 1pt to equal it. She grudgingly paid | ans small wages of a grim- d who had all the at the tips of her, broad Amy was beaten and | massaged and pummeled without mercy by the grim Hilda every day. Her dress- table and the cabinet of the square ath room off her room were crowded s of cold cream, contour cream, meal for almond packs, Xin ce powders, peach, mauve and sun for Amy's complexion changed with the different hours of the day. Through the half-open door of her | bed room Judy had seen Amy, a long re wrapped in a sheet, with a startling green face, as she tried out a new beauty pack which had been recom- mended by Patty Warren. Amy was abetted in her beauty cam- paign by Patty Warren, who cannily played off Eunice against her and thus reaped a harvest both ways. Patty's novelty store was a meeting place for the women of Amy’s set. Patty bullied them, flattered them, relayed gossip amusingly and charged them three times the worth of the dresses and pow- ders and perfumes which she sold to them Between Amy and Judy there had | been watchful waiting since the night | Mme. Carter had given Judy the Chi- | nese shawl. Money was Amy’s god and there would be some money left at Mme. | Carter’s death She’s not so straightforward and simple as she looks!” Amy spoke of Judy to Eunice over the tea table one afternoon, and the words came viciously through her clenched teeth. “Believe me. she'll bear watching—she's & deep | dish! | A dreary round of empty days for | Judy. All the more empty now when Stan went up to the city to business. She found herself living for the quiet time of the evening when she shut the | door on the rest of the household and | |had her handsome husband to herself. She knew she was an alien in this ! big, formal house—that she was ac- NEW_YORK TOLEDO PHICADELPHIA BRISTOLY P WINSTON-SALEM QJ CHARLOTTE AUGUSTAY B CHARLESTON ) SAVANNAH JACKSONVILLE 0 QST. AUGUSTINE BUS TERMINAL 1336 New York Ave. NW. Phone: Metropolitan 1512 TIC OUND . st will stimulat “pe © 1922, Standard Braods Incorporsted revives. And when that happens we soon get back our old “pe‘;)x.," Just eat Fleischmann’s Yeast fol- lowing the directions on the label —3 cakes a day. It's rich in three vitamins, B, G and D. At grocers, restaurants, and soda fountams. IMPORTANT— Fleischmann’s Yeast for health comes only in the foil- wrapped cake with the yellow label. It’s yeast in its fresh, effective form —the kind famous doctors advise! =3 Cakes a Day jover her. cepted by these people, by the whole so- cial set of Lockwood, because she was Stan’s wife. The knowledge made her cheeks burn and miserable anger swept There were times Wwhen wounded pride bade her leave—she got as far as packing her suitcase once, her tears falling onto the clothes she folded. And all the time she knew that she would never leave—that she couldn’t leave Stan. 1t frightened her, the love she felt for Stan. A deep and terrible thing, .'an ecstasy and a torture. It was not’ a strengthening love—it weakened her, humbled her in spite of herself. Perhaps the flood was so full because it had been so long stemmed. Aunt Hetty, in her stoical New England way, had never lavished any affection on the little girl she had taken to raise. Love had come alive in Judy and Stan's hot, ardent kisses—an emotional force which shook Judy to her heart. Long, empty days, with the ache of jealousy in her hear . wearing a Smile like a mask on her face. And al- ways there was a weary argument going on in her own mind—Judy talking down to her heart. Suppose Stan had been engaged to Eunice Wilson at one time! ~Lots of people had been engaged and then mar- | ried some one else. But that strange night on the train—his black moods. Well, Stan was mocdy by nature— spoiled—but adorable, she added loyally in her own mind. Stan had been embarassed at meet- ing Eunice when they had first come here—snd people had watched them Phone Orders Filled by covertly as if they watched s secret drama. Oh, what did that prove! Judy put back her hair from her hot forehead and shook her head wearily, as though to shake away the crowding thoughts. People would always talk. ... She wouldn't be a jealous wife and hurt Stan_with suspicions. . . . Stan, with his dark, ardent face bent just above her own, Stan's arms aboug her. . . . Of course, he loved her! He loved her alone! Judy had her golden moments. Stan came home early one afternoon and in- sisted that she run out to the Country Club with him. “Don't bother to doll up,” he called impatiently. “Anything will do. Il drive the car around in front. You get | ready.” The big, shaded house—it was the height of the afternoon, Mrs. Carter and Vera were both at bridge teas, Amy up in the city shopping—had suddenly lost its gloomy silence. Judy dashed up- stairs to her own bed room, pulling off her dress as she ran. She could hear Stan driving the car from the garage as she drew on a sweater and skirt and pulled on & pair of flat-heeled golf She ran down the long, broad | , a little song beginning in her A golden day ... the glow of the country was reflected in Judy's heart as Stan turned the car onto the high- way. Stan was in his most winning mood—he had just turned a business deal which netted him a fair commis- sion and much satisfaction, and being Stan, had decided that it entitled him to_celebrate by a holiday. “Your education has beem sadly neg- |lected, wench!” he threatened Judy. |“I'm going to teach you golf!” | Do you think you know enough | about it"to teach any one>” Judy asked | saucily, knowing that Stan took his | game " seriously. But her hand went jout to his knee and her eyes looked love at him. | Stan swung the car into the drive- way before the red stucco club house, with dts - awninged porches. “Hello, there's some of the gang!” | At the head of the wide steps Eunice | Wilson stood swinging a club while she | talked with Georgia De Haas and Billy Sumner. Eunice, beautiful as a picture in a white silk sport suit and a smart {green hat which turned her eyes to long, |enticing mysteries of jade. | And suddenly the peace of the golden | day was shattered for Judy. She raged | inwardly at having to quit the shelter | of the car and walk up the steps under their critical eyes. She could cheerfully have killed Stan for telling her that | anything would do to wear. Eunices's smart white silk, she knew, made her | own tan woolen skirt and brown sweater look commonplace by comparison. “It's perfect that you've come, Stan!" | Georgia De Haas cut the greetings short with her high staccato voice. “We're | dying to make a foursome and there are necne of our own crowd here but that impossible Tubby." | “Afraid you're nailing the wrong man, | Georgia,” "Stan returned. “I promised | to teacn Judy the game.” Judy felt her face flush as they looked at her—consclous that she appeared | stupid, conscious that she appeared dowdy. Eunice's white lids narrowing over her jade eyes in a lazy smile. “What a brave person you are! To allow your own husband to teach you golf! The course is strewn with the bleached bones of wives whose husbands .started to | teach them——" “And the asylums are crowded with husbands!” Billy Sumner, like all good players, had little patience with the be- |ginner. His humor was strained and | Judy heard him say in a savage under- tone: “Good Lord, Stan, you're & dum- my. What do you think wt have the ‘pro’ for? No husband can teach his |own wife. Come on, go around the course with us!” Judy spoke, quite as though her heart | was not hammering with indignation “Yes, go ahead, dear. I don't feel iike learning today.” ‘Tomorrow—Feminine Warfare. London’s elementary schools have | 685,004 puplls, or 200,000 less than in | 1915. | “KLUTCH” HOLDS FALSE TEETH TIGHT ||, Kiuteh forms a comfort cushion, holds the plate so snug it can't rock, drop. || chate or, be miazed with You can eat and speak you did with your own tee A 50c box gives three months of unbelievable comfort. At all - drusslsts—Advertise- ment. Will Wire a 6- 105 Room House for ELECTRICITY A splendid job. complete with all bulds and fixtures. Terms easily arranged. Phone us today. < MUDDIMAN ;. 911 G St. Nat'l 0140-2622 Organized 1888 ZEMO RELIEVES ITCHING BURNING ECZEMA Soothing, cooling ZEMO brings prompt relief to itching, burning skin; even in severe cases relief comes as soon as ZEMO touches the tortured skin. Eczema, Ring- worm, Rashes, Pimples, Dandruft and other annoying skin or scalp troubles generally yield to this soothing, antiseptic lotion. ZEMO is safe and dependable. All Drug- gists, 35c, 60c, $1.00. Extra Strength ZEMO best for chronic cases—$1.25 FOR SKIN IRRITATIONS Marion Gage, Personal Shopper Free Parking Space for You —opposite our 8th St. en- trance, while you are shop- 'ping here at Goldenberg’s. A real convenience—use it! Value-Wise Shoppers Are Taking Advantage of the Savings in Our JANUNIRY NSALEN Purchase! 59¢ to $1 ayon Undies $1 Tub Frocks 58c¢ All are made of vat dye prints—and the styles are very attractive —showing the new longer skirts. Now is the time to order a sup- ply. Sizes 16 to 52 Printed Hooverettes Sleeveless fancy $1 printed models; others with small sleeves, Small, medium or large. Goldenberg’s—Second Floor. Now on Sale at A Special January Sale Feature for Thursday at Samples and Irregulars of a Well Known Brand Pajamas! Nightgowns! Bloomers! Chemise! Pajama Coats! Panties! Combinations! Vests! Extra Size Vests & Bloomers! Spun-Low, non-run and plain delustered rayon are included in this marvelous group— but of course, not all garments in each type of rayon, And the imperfections are very slight—you'll gladly overlook them at this amazing and medallion trimmed styles. low price. selections early! Thursday—Our First 1 32 BABY DAY! all means shop in person if you can—its such FUN selecting these precious little garments—but if that is inconvenient, Marion Gage, our personal shopper, will fill mail and phone orders—N Ational 5220. In any event, DON'T miss these bargains! In Sizes to 2 years 79¢ Wool Sacques White trim- med with pink C or blue rayon threads. 49¢ Gertrudes, hand-scalloped at top and bottom. But- 3§C ton-on shoulder style... 39¢ Flannelette Wear, gowns, gertrudes and kimonos, finished With shell stitching. For 2Qq new bables .... s apping Blankets in dainty pxr‘xtta?x?i-vfhne. or blue- D5 and-white plaids 25c Quilted Pads, size 17x18 inche Absorbent 10 quality Goldenbery' Those Lovely Little “Nanette” Dresses 59¢ The daintiest little long and short models—of soft nainsook—with touches of hand embroidery and deep hems. anta” Binders, made of soft combed cotton, with three tles cn side 250 79¢ Silk Bonnets, fluffy» and tailored styles in white or 590 pink, with silk lining. ... Infants’ Blankets in pink or blue with cunning nursery SQc designs. Crib size...... Bootle Sets, sacque, cap and booties, of white ;11001, trimmed with pink or blue. Special . $1'59 50c Rubber Sheets in white, red or blue, with eyelets for pinning. Size 27x36 “Dalby” Shirts, button-front and double breasted models of rayon-wool - and - cotton. Soc Sizes to 3 years......... 's—Third Floor. Goldenberg's—Main Floor. $3.00 “C/B” Foundations side wrap- around model shown—of pink brocade —medium or long — with knit elastic sections and abdomen re- inforcements. Sizes 26 to 32. Also a smart elastic step-in irdle (not shown) 14 inches ong—which comes in sizes 28 to 36. Both models are excep- tional values. 69c Extra Size Porto Rican Gowns Imagine such a low price for 39 these hand-em- c broidered white, flesh or peach gowns. Women’s $1 Fancy Printed Pajamas legs. Sizes 18 The po pular 55 ~ and 17. one-piece styles with wide trouser Goldenberg's—Becond Floor. Tailored as well as lace Make your EYES Examined Invisible Bifocal Lenses® Far and Near Vision in one pair of lenses $12! Only .. Fine Lenses for Far Or Near Vision Fitted - $3.50 Special Price of .. *Colored and Cylindri- cal Lenses not included Regularly Sold at “Every Pair of Glasses Guaranteed” Two Registered Optom- etrists. Dr. Kansto- room in Charge Use Your Charge Account. Optical Dept.—Malin Floor. Every Winter Coat Has Been Reduced! The best values in many a moon—to be found in the three smart groups below! Of fine sport and dress woolens—with handsome trimmings of marmink, beaver, fitch, opossum, cara- cul, Persian lamb, dyed cross fox, kit fox, skunk or Man- churian wolf (Chi- nese dog). Sizes 14 to 46 $24.50 and $29.50 Sport & Dress Coatsit . S Expensively Furred $39.50 & $45 Coats ........ Coats that were $59.50 & $69.50. . .. $1875 $20.50 $44.50 Goldenbers's—Secong) Floor. »

Other pages from this issue: