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GLOBE TROTTERS ARRIVE IN CAPITAL Twelve Young Germans Will| Appear at Central High School Tonight. A PAThu CHAPTER 24. | ALONE AT LAST. | HE hour was shortly after 10. The boat sailed at midnight. | Clive felt like a prisoner who | had served his sentence. He| hadn’t realized how bitterly his | rsonality had been curtailed till their | and baggage had been carried down| to the waiting taxi. | “Good-by, little nest, where we've| been so bappy,” Santa kissed slim| ©On a globe-circling hike 'lhlt already | fingers to bare floors and sheeted fur-| has taken them across three continents, | niture. 12 talented young Germans, members of that country’s celebrated ‘Youth Movement,” tarried here today for a | glimpse of the Nation’s Capital. Led by Robert Oelbermann, crippled | eavalry officer, the youths, ranging in age from 15 to 25, started from their | homes in Germany two years ago. Hik- ing through France and to Lisbon, Por- tugal, they caught a boat for South America. On that languorous continent they spent 18 months, visiting each of Clive's heart whispered. “And may you burn while we're gone.” | In the taxi his spirits rose “What's the matter with you rested her hand on his knee. bouncing.” He barged into her, all but bumping her nose. “‘Our honeymoon's commencing.” She pushed him aside. Santa 'You're “Goose! You're crazy.” Nevertheless, his excitement infected sts countries and absorbing at first hand | her. Having made sure that their | knowledge of “how the other half of the world lives.” Enter U. §. Through Mexico. Then up through Mexico they hiked into the United States, entering through Texas. Educational films which they took in South America were shipped | back home and are now being shown in | 2ll UFA theaters throughout Germany. Expenses are being paid from pro- | oeeds of a show, “Totentanz,” or the| “Dance of Death,” which the youths | present in each city through which they s. Although only young amateurs, | E: actors are said to play their parts | with the perfection of talented profes- sionals. At Central High Tonight. Tonight at Central High School the trunks were aboard, they went on deck. As they stood by the gangplank she Jogged him. “Remember the last time?” | “When you didn’t follow me? What chase you've led me!” “Hope I've been worth while.” “S0-50,” he shrugged his shoulders. “As an example of impassioned love- making that's not so hot,” she grinned | impertinently. “If I stayed at boiling point, I'd! evaporate,” he retorted. | The band had ceased playing. 'l\lasi | fussed about the liner, nosing her into the dark. tank of river. The screw started churning. | “How about bed?” he suggested. | “I've only you to protect me,” she whispered irrelevantly. She uttered his thought. Having | 12 again will put on their show. It will | been married three months, at last they be presented at 8 o'clock, with admis- | Were alone. | sion free. Oelbermann, the crippled | Lights of New York faded like bale- der. piays the part of the beggar, |ful stars. The little white cabin in- l:l‘fll:rfl.pnll)edeger Has the role of Death, | Statitly became home to him. The rea- The latter is said to have exceptional fability as an actor, and his fellow mem- } for it. bers of the “wanderlust” believe he some day will carve a place for himself in the theater or in Hollywood. Since they have been in Washington |son was not far to seek. He had paid He'd stipulated that she was to his guest. Even her letter of credit he had provided. “Jinks! It's comfy.” “Remains to be seen,” she responded, the youths have been entertained pri- | “whether I can lift my head from the vately by Serman Ambassador | Prittwitz and other friends of Germany. Here for the past four days, it was not | unt{l today that the young men dis- closed to the newspapers their presence. | von | pillow tomorrow. On my last voyage, which was to Havana—" “I've heard about it.” He cut her short, | It was a blue, Summer crossing. Next morning the ocean was still as a mill- pond. Having breakfasted in their | They explored each other’s emotions, THE EVENING S ARADISE DAWSON yet you allowed me to make & fool of you.” “And you're asking the reason? Had I rebelled, I'd have lost you.” “Lost me!” She was honestly amazed. “But, Clive, till we left New York that was my terror—that I'd lose you. It was why I shouldered all the responsi- bilities. You weren't used to marriage; I was. It seemed to me that if I spared you worries—— But I'm anxious to hear your side. Tell me.” He could afford to jest at a danger that was past. “If you'd asked me in New York I should have replied desperately, ‘God pity the simp who marries a wife with money.’ " She gazed at him incredulously. Made a rude face. Jerked her hat over her nose and slipped back on the cushions. Until she spoke gurglingly, ne was uncertain whether she was dis- guising tears with comedy. “You funny boy! God pity the simp who doesn't.” That evening they packed. Next morning they were on their way to France. ‘The ice of their reticence was broken. determined that nothing must remain hidden. Santa upbraided herself with | ludicrous vehemence. “What I deserve is the ducking stool.” In the face of such abject retraction, he discouraged further introspection. “Much more of this remorse,” he feigned flerceness, “and I'll lay you across my knee and spank you.” “I'd kick like the dickens,” she laughed. On their only night in Paris she ap- | pointed herself a penance. Nothing would do but he must conduct her to the cafe in which he had read the de- scription of her wedding to Dak. “What a shabby little beast I was!” As a corrective, he hailed a passing fiacre and ordered the man to drive to the Folies Bergere. “Quit it.” He chushed her to him. | ‘There’s no one dearer in the world. | I'm fed up with your repentance.” Twisting in his embrace, she giggled: | “So am I1.” | That started a new chapter. When | they arrived in the Basque country the | following evening they seemed to have become lovers without a past. The sun-saturated contentment claimed them. Everything seemed a stage-set- ting for their passion. For an entire week they forgot time and laughed. AR, WASHINGTON, One day on the beach, after bathing, Clive missed her. When she rejoined him at lunch, she was wearing a face as long as a fiddle. That afternoon she excused herself on the plea that she had a headache. At 5 o'clock he tip- toed into her darkened room to find it empty. Shortly before dinner she en- tered and begged him to take her to the Casino. “But you're not up to it.” She professed that her headache had quite, quite vanished. At the Casino they dined out of doors on a terrace, rose-pink in the light of sunset. The sea was mackerel-green— the horizon a jasper wall. A Spanish orchestra made wild music, to which a brilliant crowd of spendthrifts, fortune- hunters and respectable sightseers danced tumultuously. - They dawdled over coffee long after night had gathered. Clive did his best to entertain her. She paid him no more than a polite attention. Sudden- ly, with a hurried, “Excuse me,” she escaped him. Having settled the bill, he hunted everywhere for -her. His anxiety had reached fever pitch when he bumped into her coming out of the baccarat | “Oh, it's you!® Her face was chalky. “I've seen enough. Best be going.” In their room at the hotel, overiook- ing the mooniit Golfe de Gascogne, they undressed in silence as though they had quarreled. As he extinguished the lights she dug her face in the pillow and burst into uncontrollable sobbing. “But, Santa, what have I done?” She threw her arms about him, seek- | ing_protection. “It's not you. It's Dicky.” “Curse the fellow. I'll settle his hash. | Has he taken to writing you?” “He’s here. Today I saw him.” Dicky does exactly what nelther Clive nor Santa expected. Spanish lotteries yielded the govern- ment nearly $34,000,000 in the first half of this year. New Way to Hold Loose | FALSE TEETH Firmly in Place Do false teeth annoy and bother by dropping_and _slipping when you eat. ? pur Sl Sorinkle o litti gummy. govey. P taste. ~ Makes breath pleasant. Fasteeth today at Peoples Drug Stores | or any other drug store.—Advertisement. D. C., WEDNESDAY, . PLEA OF HUNGER FAILS TO WIN MERCY IN THEFT Judge Declares District Will Feed Man 60 Days in Jail for Stealing Hams. A plea of hunger which Charles Spencer, colored, 47, recently released from Lorton Reformatory, gave as his excuse to Police Court Judge Isaac R. Hitt for stealing two hams, failed yes- terday, and the magistrate sentenced him to serve 60 days. The prisoner admitted stealing the meat from Louis Robbin, grocer, of the 700 block of U street. He explained that he recently had been freed from jail and had been robbed of the little money he had by employment agency operators. He pleaded that he was try- mother in nearby Virginia. “I was weak and hungry tired I took that meat, judge,” he added. “If you are ever hungry,” the | Santa gazed fondly at Clive. answered, “the District of Ooldmbln will take care of you. Sixty days.” RANDOLPH DOUBTS BEER WOULD INCREASE CRIME Head of Chicago “Secret Six” Says | YOU? Racketeers Would Be Absorbed. By the Associated Press. Robert Isham Randol Chica- go's “Secret Six,” told n-e:.'wg:p" men yesterday that there will no big crime wave if and when the eighteenth amendment is repealed. The colonel came here to.speak be- fore a forum of the Cincinnat! Cham- ber of Commerce. “There will be a period of adjustment afterward, but not their livelihcod, and most of them will | be absorbed. Some of those who are used t0 large sums of money easily ob- | tained will go into cther forms of rack- | eteering, but without the sinews of war | to hold them together they will be more easily broken up.” FOUR BANDITS ABDUCT | BANKER AND GET $5,000| By the Associated Press. | PANHANDLE, Tex, November 16.— | G. W. Newson, cashier of the First State Bank of Stinnett, Tex,.was re- leased rmed on the highway near Panhandle last night by four men who kidnaped the banker 'yesterday after obtaining approximately $5000 in a raid on the depositary. Newson said he was forced to enter an automobile in which the quartet of robbers fled the scene. Officers con- | tinued to search for the robbers last | | | | ht. & ‘gunning mate of the BREMEN and EUROPA | sailingto the | I Medifernanean FIB. 4 - 53 DAYS - 21 PORTS | FIRST CLASS $600 UP * TOURIST $300 UP Apply 57 Broadway, New York City, | or your own agent. »u 4 ———— | Stop Bad Breadth| Thousands of people afflicted with bad breath find quick relief through Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets. The pleas- ant, sugar-coated tablets are taken for | bad breath by all who know. Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets act gently | but Srmly on the bow and Dr. F. M. ’D'llwltii zhnefed the for- mals after 20 years of practice among afflicted with bowel and liver int, with the attendant bad o you il Rew Blive color. ' Take #ad nole ke effoct. berths and dressed lazily, they strolled and were enticed to join in a game of shuffieboard. By evening they were known as the bridal couple. Then London. In a setting to which they both were strange, his errand gave them their only importance. He was up early. All day he was absent. He returned to the hotel to find her eager. Business concluded, conversation turned on which of all the wonder spots they should select to spend their holiday. ~ Because quite a number of | their fellow passengers had been bound | for St. Jean de Luz they chose it, too.| Spain across the border, the Golfe de | Gascogne at their front door, Basques; bull fights, cork forests, the Pyrenees rising fantastic. The day before they left England they paid a hurried visit to Stratford- on-Avon. When they arrived it seemed too silly to waste the sunshine prying. Instead they hired a canoe. In the green remoteness of tinkling waters and lush meadows, the concrete of cities seemed a hideousness imagined. From pillows among which she nestled, ‘The merry stillness was molding them into a com- mon oneness. This time six months ago she had been living separated in Chicago, her future a blank. As though a bandage had been torn from her eyes, she was seeing all she owed him. V:Ivf.huut wn:’tlng. she asked: “Were you happy in the apartment?” “Then you knew I wasn't?” “I didn’t; I do now. Why weren't “You acted as though 'd bought me at & pet shop.” s “Was it as bad as that?” “’Fraid it was.” She raised herself on her elbow. “You were as much my husband then as you are now. Why didn’t you em- ploy cave-man tactics?” “Because you weren't as much my wife then as you are now. 8he frowned llughln%lyA “Darling, you dot k sap, and SQUIBB LIQUID PETROL woaun SQUIBB-OL - NOW COSTS NO MORE THAN ORDINARY MINERAL OILS The increased sales of Squibb Liquid Petro- Jatum (also called Squibb-ol) enable the House of Squibb to reduce materially its price on this high quality product. The public has discovered that Squibb-ol is a gentle, natural regulator . ;3 safe, pure, trustworthy . . . not a harsh, habit- forming laxative. Squibb-ol is an internal fubri cant, not a drug . . . a natural oil. Odorless, tasteless, non-fattening, non-hesting. Your physician will approve of this good e0d honest product. When buying demand Sguibb’s. © 1033, B. . Squibh & foms. UM SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. yes, mother, it’s safe ... kiddies can play around it in safety Electric iron, cord, plug and covered ironing board when you buy a Kenmore De Luxe This heme loundry offer onds Saturday, November 19. Gt - ‘@ | ; ‘“””N{( Everything about this wonderful washer is designed for quiet, trouble-free running. The motor is mounted on rib- ber to stop vibration. The gears are cut instead of presse causing them to mesh noiselessly. Fully enclosed gea — perfectly safe for children about. Women expect their Kenmore to be quiet-running, just as they expect them fo turn out tubfuls of snowy-white clothes! Kenmore gets clothes cleaner for less money. Come in and see it today! Retail Dept. Store, 911 Bladensburg Rd. N.E. Retail Stores, 3140 M St. and 1825 14th N.W. Kenmore Excels in Performance «« « Loads the Way.in Price | ‘5920 Some day you will purchase the Kenmore ... 30 why not now . . . during Sears Super Value Days, while this free merchandise offer makes your saving more exciting than ever§ This seal protects m!m MAIL COUPON TODAY SEARS, ROEBUCK and CO. 911 Bladensburg Road N.E. Send representative regarding your Fres offer in con nection with the Kenmore De Luxe. No obligation. OGRS R M L AT i O SRR, ORI TR NOVEMBER 16, 1932. 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