Evening Star Newspaper, April 10, 1933, Page 10

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)

D CHEERED § RECEIPTS SOAR : ecutives, Called to Session Today, Will Discuss Stabilization. z & ¥ the Associated Press. HOLLYWOOD, April 10.—Motion cture executives meeting here today fo “stabilize the industry,” need not Pe pessimistic. % Along with reports that theater at- dance in the Nation was on the crease were unofficial estimates that now in its Angeles, would Wrong,” would rise above $1,000,- . Because of its foreign receipts “*Cavalcade” was placed above any of these for returns and “The Sign of $he Cross” at more than $1,000,000 for same Teason. " One theatrical magazine, noting the dance jump, placed the national ly figure now at 80,000,000, com- with the 60,000,000 average for 932. @ An Academy of Motion Picture Arts | Science spokesman said there was prospect of five or six studios re- g normal salaries. Players ac- gepted a voluntary reduction ranging around 50 per cent for eight weeks with the bank holiday, when iter attendance reached an ex- ly low point. They now are at- pting show that some of the dios are a position to return to 1 salaries. L While denying the motion picture rs and distributors plan a new cut, Will Hays, president, said pmblem is to balance up between in all branches and the come from the box office.” “It's lucky,” sald Roger, when he and Olga had made their way safely, miles from the boma, it was not Usanga who discovered and captured me. He would have felt less fear of !he glant flying machine and know how to wreck it. “that airplane. Into the trackless jungle the man and girl pene- trated, worming their way over fallen tree trunks and through tangled underbrush, often on their hands and knees. . savage warriors w're gathered about a British . South of them, a number of After the aviator was brought to Numabo's village had been captured, the deserter-sergeant went out to search for the But when he located and Usanga heard how Roger plane, intending to destroy it. it, a new thought entered his brain. this. could profit by with considerable awe. Perhaps he Dally he returned to it. look at it with the accustomed air of its owner. So fearlessly he clambered into the fuselage, even wishing he might learn to operate it. other thought came to him. from the pay roll st Walter Reed Gen- eral Hospital, Col. Albert E. Truby, commanding officer of the Army medi- cal center, said today in explaining continue to function as an hospital in the mtu:.ml,nd 'l'a‘l“:l:’e veteran cases are transferred the staff ;: :he hospital must be reduced aecord- Pirst the thing filled him But eventually he came to ‘Then an- INSTALLMENT XVL AM not a slave owner,” Short- €61 “wen said finally. “I will advise your wife that you insist upon 8 private talk with her. I ad- mit I don’t like the role of an inactive bystander. I should have pre- fef;ed to take every responsibility my- self— " Shortwell had risen, and, undecided as to whether he might shake hands with Thomas, had moved toward him. SCHOLARSHIP PLAQUE IS AWARDED STUDENT Valpeay Darling of G. W. U. Honored for Outstanding Work in Engineering School. ‘H. Valpeay Darling was awarded the Theta Xi activities and scholar- plague as “the most deserving in the School of Engineering” of ‘Washington University at the ual engineering banquet Saturday t-at the Mayflower Hotel. Sigma Tau medal, awarded an- to_the' engineering student who n‘fl%'g" 46t g conferred upon Lester W. "l‘h assembled alumni and stlldu Advisory Board of the Reconstruc- Finance Corporation. Greetings the unxvernty were -presented by Heck Marvin, president, and John R. Lapham of the School of RST BOTTLE” SMASHED zpfldent Mars Joy of Beer En- 3 thusiast Who Trailed Prize. R N Bt set on the first' bottle of brewery in he followed the first case He was a head taller. tell my wife,” Thomas said, “that I shall never agree to a divorce, until she and I have discussed it in pri- vate. If she cares to, she may look at 1t as blackmail.” During lunch when the idea of black- mail had first entered his head, it had secretly worried him behind all Luise's gay chatter. But he had come to believe that he was simply doing his duty. It was unfair not to give her a final chance belure she took the irretrievable false ‘And when you have talked with Sybil, will you agree to the divorce?” asked Shortwell with such intensity that it seemed as if he were trying to clutch an opportunity which might never recur. During the whole interview he had been afraid to-mention divorce, though :1:‘;- the one thing incessantly in his America, in so far as the external facade of morality is concerned, is not & tolerant country. Shortwell knew that he and Sybil would be socially dead un- less he could introduce her as his wife. “So yal will agree to a divorce?” he asked violently, wlt.h so little self-con- trol, that Thomas r¢ at once whu a powerful weapon against the two he held in his hands. “If my wife convinces me that she uaoluuly desires it—yes!” said Thomas. made & low bow, and no ering Thomas his got the coveted first bottle, raised whnupnmmmmn It smashed. LA R g A G SBP A R e s O At at LRt it Las AR TS SRR . 2 L Lt At led | door. 'LUXURY LINER —By Gina Kaus— (COPYRIGHT, 1033, BY GINA KEAUS) Even if Sybil wasn't the woman he had thought her to be for five years, she was still a woman, a living being, not a dead stone; even if she had fol- lowed Shortwell of her own free will, even if she kept her door locked to her husband without Shortwell's orders— even if all these things were true, she would be frightened at her.own actions and repent. And then . ... ‘Then—perhaps I will no longer be able to care for her. Perhaps I will never be able to love her again as I have loved her; perhaps then I will be free forever of my passion and my jealousy, and with my own hand take her and lead her to Shortwell. But this thought brought him no release; on the contrary, it was terribly pllnml, like thinking of the death of some one who is irreplaceable. It will no longer be I, this man who has ceased to love Sybfl it will be another, a new Thomas Wohlmut, a wiser man, bouom heaved, but she enjoyed this, Weu. go and Join this yellow death's head,” she said to Thomas, who some time before had seen Krleglacher en- ‘; and sit down at a distant table. steered his way between the tables and dancing couples toward the eminent surgeon. Luise and Viadimir were left alone. “Shall we dance?” asked ‘he. She replied lnnkly, “No, we don't have to dance. Her smiling, happy eyes rested ug?n his face. Her hand lay on the white tablecloth close to his. Luise’s warm humanity had a healing effect upon Vladimir. . He considered himself cool and calculating as far as women were concerned or any of the other realities of life. There was a great nostalgia in his heart, but he did not believe there was any place on earth where it could ever find a home. “What are you thinking about, sweet little prince?” He was pondering the prohlzm n to whether he was in love with Luise be- cause her warm humanity lumunded him like a comfortable room which one doesn’t want to leave. But he couldn’t quite make it out. Yesterday he was alone on this big liner; today he was no longer alone. That' substantially was all that he knew. “There is 'little Milli Lensch,” sald perhaps, and one better adjusted to Ufe | Luise —but I, as I am wdly, eart-broken, suffering, tormented, ulted—con- stituting the most vim part of my present being—I will be dead. Hardly knowing what he was doing, he opened the drawer of his desk. The revolver lay in the farthest right corner exactly where he had put it yesterday. He took it out, and turned n over and over. In that event there will be a dwdmnvmhout-lhothlflnlbem And if Sybil remained deaf to all his pleas? If she should hear no other call but that of her infatuation, if nhz threw me and our years together and the woman she once was, away like a pmonom:weklna ‘what if she were to walk across my ruined life to louwmunmm—thm.... ‘Thomas violently tossed the revolver back into the drawer, and double lock- ed it. He still felt the drawn trigger in his convulsive fingers. A sudden, blood-red wave of hate rushed to his brain when there came a knock at the It was Luise Clemens. She scolded him a bit because he had forgotten their appointment. It was 10 minutes to 5. “You look as though you had m:‘: ¢ | dered some one,” she good taste,” she said, “and the people able and less puffed up importance and: the to imagine that sandwiches were aldimir ; | [‘;hnn e o "ll it W.\vl this year of all years! Europe and You! Get together this year! It’s just a matter of dollars and sense, andwe've written a book that tells why, full of facrsand figures that prove there’s a Europe at yourprice thisyear. Just for instance ....a cabine at some of the smartest beaches, onlyabout 25¢ aday...a good seat farthe finest opers, about $1.50 —-a gondola for 4 people,about 85¢ an hour...but RewndTrip let our book tell you the wihole story. This coupon $18400 brings it fee! EUROPE? ... Of course you can go. Taunist Clas This message Canadian-Paci! sponsored by e Bteamsnivs, Cosulich Liner Daited Sta the following Transatiantic Steamahip Lines: Anchor Lins, 1! Line, Cunard Line, ican Line, liolhnd-Aneriun gLine, Ttalla Line, North' German tes Lines, White Star Line. ‘Hamburs- d, Red Btar ‘The green crepe-de-chine dress and the smart little felt hat entered the door. Luise thought at first that ths apparition was excellent but that the little girl underneath was hardly worth considering. But her gayly exalted mood demanded that she should find Milli, too, bewitching. When the little girl and her plump companion sat down three tables away she sent one of her violent, passionate looks over toward her. Luise rested her warm hand on the prince’s hand and said, “She has the most beautiful eyes on the Co- lumbia.” Vladimir had caught Milll's intense | look, but had been left indifferent by it. He sat beside Luise just as one sits be- side a stove without having the siight- est intention of exposing himself to any tempest. Milli’s debut was a disappointment to Luise. She had been looking forwara to a grotesque scene—the ancient but always effective comedy; a girl of the lower classes suddenly thrown amongst her betters. She had ted shy awk- wardness, comic blunders, and other small misadventures and finally a 'L'f“ debacle. But nothing of the sort hap- pened. Milli had remembered all tne instructions of old Marius. She held her teacu too daintily—and she drank her tea without a sound. She put only two little salmon sandwiches on her plate and two tiny pleces of cake in spite of the tempting abundance that was offered her. A bright young woman, once she has I.:1 lf:m in view, has no limits of adaps- ability. (To Be Continued Tomorrow) 'AS THE LIVER 1S TO BACON daintily—perhaps a little | * MOTOR CYCLIST INJURED Collides With Parked Car—Treat- ed at Sibley. Colliding with a car parked in the 3100 of Newton street northeast yes- terday afternoon, Ohmer Clemons, 26, 313 F street northeast, a motor cyclist, yas seriously injured. Clemons was treated at Sibley Hos- pital for a fractured skull and abrasions to his face and hip. Today his con- dition was improved. Five-year-old John F. Young, 1327 L street southeast, was treated at Casualty Hospital last night for injuries | = received when he was struck by an | automobile near his home. | Have White Teeth Safely Now, with the aid of Dentox Tooth Paste, everyone may have sparkling white teeth « free from that ugly “yellowish” tinge. Besides safe, gentle cleansing and polishing agents Dentox contains a | special ingredient which tends to keep the gums firm and healthy. Use Dentox for just one month and mote | the difference. ' Get a generous S0c tube for 29c today ‘at Peoples Dxu( Of the 30 dismissed employes, Col. GETS DRUNK TOO QUICK |iherapy aigs > 18 Were occupational — Duluth Man Fails to Get Leniency Belgrade’s Balconies Taxed. With New Beer Alibi. DULUTH, Minn. (#).—A tipsy gen- tleman, arrested at 12:04 am. ‘“new beer’s day,” told Judge Richard M. Funck in Municipal Court he got that way celebrating the return of beer, but the court had different ideas. “You can't,” ruled his honor, in im- posing sentence, “get drunk on the new beer in three minutes.” HERE'S m WAY TO HEAL THAT STUBBORN SORE If you are suffering from an gravating' sore which has the many treatments you have almost, sy HEADACHE —Why wait for slow. teqymlith-hu-d 0 on”the body. Ity soothing, countless people who | varicose ulcers or Your druggist sells and Use Liquid CADUDINE mends Resinol Ointment l’w For free sample vrfi 8, Baltimore, = ' AS POTATO TO THE STEW - AS THE CORNED BEEF TO THE CABBAGE— THAT’S HOW | GO FOR YOU-OU-0U SLICED! LOOK FOR THE RYE BREAD IN THE FAMOUS BALLOON WRAPPER WONDER Rye BREA ASK ANY OLD-TIMER “Which Rye Bread?” What is beer, anyway? Why, it is the thing people have been missing when they ate rye ly know beer, you know . yonr rye bread too, and the combined flavor of Wonder Rye Bread and beer will come back to you like the words and tune of a favorite old song. Wonder Rye Bread—the kind of rye they used to buy in the breweries! The oheese-makers and the pickle- makers and the wurst-makers, along with the beer-makers, are creating their product with Wonder Rp Bread in mind: Wonder Rye Bread has not come back. It hasn't been away—but it has been terribly lonesome. Your grocee hasit. The same old flavor. The same tough-crusted, tender-bodied loaf— now sliced and wrapped. ring them together now—beer Wonder Rye. You will never want them to be separated. They 20LD(fAVORITE SANDWICHES plenty of sliced ham and cheese between two buttered slices of ‘Wonder Rye Bread. Add a little mustard. If you want to be very special, use cole slaw and Russian dressing instead of the mustard. FAVORITE LIVERWURST AND « « « Butter the Wonder Rye Bread. Slice the tender young onion: Slice the delicately flavored liverwurst, too 33z and there you -n.)upnfi-nfitul-p _WITH THE.OLD:TIME FLAVOR.

Other pages from this issue: