Evening Star Newspaper, August 18, 1936, Page 8

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)

SOCIAL EMBASSY | Diplomatic service . .. distin- e ... Continen- place of common d good t : Cafe de Ia ble, $5.00 TERRACED SUITES and APARTMENTS ST.MORITZ On-The-Park 50 CENTRAL PARK SOUTH NEW YORK Visit the famous SKY GARDENS RESORTS. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. z » 9% MADISON * NEW « ATLANTIC CITY « FIREPROOFE DOESN'Y 11 WEEKLY RATE FOR TWO Room—Bath—Meals §30 and up $urf Bathing Privileges * Attractive Daily Rates Fetter & Hollinger, Inc ENGLEWOOD 12 S. Missouri Ave. All outside rooms. £1.30 dav up. Bathing from hotel. _ * 'F RE Do NIA Tennessee Ave. and Beach. construction £ Rooms as low as Y per poeson._Restaurant. Garage. ATLANTIC CITY 3. Rrizhter and More Aitractive than ever Fotel accommodations. Cottages and Avartments (furnished or unfurnished) at v reasonable nrices BRADDOCK HEIGHTS, MD. “On the Reasonable 'rates Coblents._Phone ADY SIDE. MD. ANNOUNCEMENT We cannot accommodate guests for week ends, even for dinner, without previous reservations until further no- tice. During the week a $1.25 dinner entitles you to a motor boat ride to the bathing beach on the Chesapeake, also dressing room. A $1.00 supper en- titles you to the sunset trip on the Bay. Daily rate $3.00, weekly rote $15.00. Phone West River 218-F-5. 33 miles from D. C. line via Marlboro. The Rural Home Hotel. A. W. ANDREWS. Prop. Shady Side, Md. Mountain—In_the Mountains.” kiel. Miss Clara ~ OCEAN CIT! D. HASTINGS HOTEL ¢ Parking Space. M MRS, CHAS. LUDL! THE STEPHEN DECATUR Ocean Front. thorouthly mod. AAA hotel | session before the camera. e Va.) Springs. T and oetter each year. d_and service and amusements free <. pool. dancing, tennis, for hire Amer- $156 per week “Sky Line and Mrs T COLONIAL BEACH, VA. TTENJOY YOUR VACATION AT COLONIAL BEACH HOTEL On the broad Potomae. Besutiful. health restful and homelike. Good ~food. from 15.00 weekly. meals. Peninsula Greshound Frank D. Blackistone. Owner & PEN .VANIA SCHWENKSVILLE. PE APRING MOURTAIN HO) Ask Mr. Foster Service _ Dist. 5300 RIDGE SUMMIT, P. WA Blue Ridee Summit. like surroundings— nt table—Open all the vear. 3 2 WHY ~ Boardwalk. | Baths. | HOLLYWOOD. Calif,, West. Mind you—Miss West warm hot plains of Lower California, flavor which added to the occasion. | BY E. de S. MELCHER. 18.—There’s nothing like a day in the desert with Mae | wasn't alone in the desert. We weren't | alone in the desert. But somehow the | the melting sun and the glare and the palms, all had a certaln Mae Westian “This country does something to | me,” said Miss West yesterday when we found her 9 miles east of Corona, | | 5 miles west of Riverside and 68 miles south of Hollywood. “It's got me going.” Miss West's costume was not strictly | desertiike at the Lake Norconian Club | Hotel, where she and Emmanuel | : | Cohen’s “Personal Appearance’ com- | pany relaxed after a hard morning’s It c sisted of a long white loose “tea- | gown.” | small blue slippers, a star sapphire on | her left hand surrounded by a wall | of diamonds, and other sapphires and | diamonds strewn half way up her |left arm. Her hair, still platinum, | | was curled and arranged loosely back | | of her ears. She didn't smoke. She | didn't drink. She had lost 12 pounds. | And her sun tan contrasted very well | indeed with the white of her gown. Film Scene in Capital. She smiled when she mentioned the fact that in the new script of “Per- | sonal Appearance” (the film will be | called “Go West, Young Man™) the | opening scene takes place in Wash- | ington, D. C.. She likes Washington, | !even if Washington did shake its | finger at her the last time she was Cohen (friend of D. C.’s Paramount Newsreel demon, Bob Denton), too. DON'T YOU 'AMERICAN . AND 60 / ANDWAGONS are all right if they know where they’re going. And members of the great “American” Pa; rty know where and how they’re going. They’re going places for less. THE EVE With Melcher in Hollywood Another in the Series of Filmland Close-Ups by The Star’s Dramatic Critic. THIS DESERT Al SORTA GETS YOu ,ble- Boy 2 | She said: “It's swell to have a| August boss who lets you get to work at | this. | 10 in the morning, instead of 9. That | was the trouble I had over at the other studio. If I got there one minute after 9 the place would go to pleces. They said I was demoralizing | the players. Maybe I was. I don't know. But I do know that, con- sidering all the clothes I have to wear, all the pressing and tailoring | ,and make-up and rewriting, etc., that has to be done, it is humanly impos- sible for me to be there always at 9. | Now I can plan on 9 and get to the studio at 10. I like that. “And look what else Mr. Cohen’s done for me,” and she pointed to one of those large brown cooling ma- chines which make Summer days livable. “When I got here I hon- estly dldn't think I'd be able to sleep. | 8¢ hot. 8o terrible. So after dinner, when I get back to my room, I find that. A wonderful man. | Just then Mr. Cohen came in and spoke as enthusiastically about Miss West as she had about him. | “Manny” is now in his glory. His new company is called Major Pictures and he has Mae West, Bing Crosby, | Gary Cooper and a couple of other stars under his wing. Except for the current Crosby film, “Pennies From Heaven,” which is being filmed at Coiumblia, he will release his produc- tions through Paramount. He thinks “Go West, Young Man,” will be Miss West's best film. So does Miss West. We sat and chatted for awhile, and | the more we sat and the more we | chatted, the more it seemed to us that | the gleam of “Klondike Annie” was | gone ™\'n Miss West's eyes—that —— | in town. She likes Producer “Manny” | now she \\9 set in the right direc- | tion. The mutual feeling of admira- ! tion for the star towards her producer | come. | Hathaway and his wife had enter- s 3 L (i and vice versa has much to do with It is a rare thing out here. Upstairs in room 202 we had spent | a rollicking hour with Isabel Jewel, Elizabeth Patterson and Margaret Perry. They looked amazingly fresh | considering the desert heat, and Miss Patterson looked 10 years younger and 10 years happier than we had ever seen her before. She is having | a field day in “Personal Appearance. So are the others. They roam about the large hotel, and people stare and are glad to see them and give them | parties, to which they mostly do not Alice Brady was in the din- ing room wheén we got there, and | Warren WIilliem, and before that | Director Henry (“Bengal Lancers”) | talned informally at cocktails. | Strange the way these movie com- panies bounce around the country in | search of the right atmosphere. What | they needed for this film was a Penn- | svlvania-looking farm house. | And where do they find it but in Corona, Calif., 68 miles from no- | where, hot in the Summer, pleasant in the Winter. And they find that farm house by showing, one evening, | not so long ago an old print of “State | Fair” in which the gallant Will Rogers | played opposite Janet Gaynor. No| sooner was the farm flashed on the screen than they knew their troubles were over. They ran to the “location STEAMSHIPS Cruises—Augz. Sept Oct. Nov. merican Line. 416 N, Charles 8t . Md merican Express - Washington.D. C. ation Holl Baltimor. 1414 F S BERMUDA VIA FURNE trip. With private bath direct to dock ef Hamiltol muda Line. 41 Whitehal ADIAN INLAND CRUIS! riptive booklet 1d.” _Canada riy Blde.. Phila.. oot bt Worl Libe NG STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C; TUESDAY, department,” located the house, packed baggage, cameras, lights and directors in & van and off they went. ‘They'll be there 10 days. They'll fin- ish the rest of the fllm in the studios. Miss West said in parting that she would actually have no time for “per- soanl appearances”—that she must stick to the West (If you get what we mean) and refrain from footlight antics, 8he still writes her own scripts, or rather rewrites them—and the reason, she says, she became in- terested in this play was because so many people said that it was written about her. It wasn't—but if you re- member the play you'll get a laugh with Miss West over the idea. She sald good-by clinging affection- ately (and kiddingly) to Mr. Cohen, who is at least half a head shorter. As we left, however, he had stood on tiptoe and kissed her fraternally on the top of her head. Lucky guy! Crooked Road. KOSSE, Tex. (#).—Mabry Pope, farmer, had to make so many turns in a 16-mile stretch of road near here he decide dto go back and count them. He found 90 right-angle bends. BEST % EUROPE Rates as low as L] L] B pouno 100:: *185 Waeekly hom Boltimere Nodolk to London snd Homburg To Howe fonni Retuning vie Hovre o0 Sovhempion. See yow , o1 Compony s ofbce, 740 14k Swent, N. W, AUGUST 18, 1936. D R R R R RO EEE—SS——m——— YEAST HEIRESS WEDS Daughter of Fleischmann Marries Cincinnatian. CAROLINA, R. I, August 18 (P).— Mrs. Louis Fleischmann Yeiser, daugh- ter of Julius Fleischmann, former head of the Fleischmann Yeast Co., and Benjamin Tate, both of Cincin- nati, Ohio, were married yesterday in town clerk’s office here. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Leon Kenny, pastor of the Free Baptist. Church of Carolina. The only witnesses were the bride’s mother, Mrs. Lily Fleischmann of Cincinnati and | her two sons, Charles and Eric. o Trio, Over 70, Regain Sight. MEPHIS, Tenn., August 18 (#).— Thelr eyesight restored, three men past 70 made plans yesterday to resume some of the activities denied them by yeurs of blindness, Physiclans pronounced successful delicate operations which removed cataracts from the eyes of James L. Hughes, 71, and J. C. McMahon, 80, both of Memphis, and T. J. Hamm, 74, ! of Ramer, Tenn. With the early season rush past, it's less crowded aboard ship and abroad. You travel with more comfort, but pay lower off-season rates during August and Septem- ber. Go Baltimore Mail. State rooms are all outside, all have hot and cold running water, 60% have private baths. You will enjoy fine food, sp: ness and spotless cleanliness. Choice wines and liquors at moderate prices. Weekly Sailings to and from Ewiope SAILINGS FROM BALTIMORE City of Hamburg City of Norfolk Aug.?? 40 s mw . Sept. 3 o0 e e Sept-10 o o 44 - of Havre Sepl.1? o ¢ ® o .Cityof Newport News MOONLIGHT SALE 7 TO 9 P.M. TONITE See Other Adv. on Page A- SUICIDE PRICES! Men’s Fine Tailored rrd |1 ONLY 50 LINEN SUITS §::.; NOW $14.50 0'COATS DOORS MUST CLOSE SEPT. Ist TROPICAL WOR STED SUITS 3 /PRICE While They Last ONLY 48 WHITE PALMETTO SUITS Were $16.50 & TOPGOATS COUGHLIN’S AIDE ILL Personal Representative Hospital for Rest. WATERTOWN, N. Y, August 18| (#).—Louis C. Ward of Pontiac, Mich., | personal representative of Rev. Charles E. Coughlin, leader of the National Union for Bocial Justice, entered a | hospital here yesterday. He sald he would take at least a day’s rest. He came here from Cleveland to attend the funeral of his brother, Wil- | Enters 'HE next time you drink beer—call for Pabst TAPaCan . . . and get all set for the biggest treat in beer flavor you ever tasted ... the flavor that has won beer drinkers from coast to coast. Never before, such flavor, such purity and wholesome refreshment. You'll want it always. And you will get it, too—by refusing substitutes — and asking for Pabst TAPaCan ~— by name. liam 8. Ward, who died last week ig Utica, If Your Watch Is Worth Repalring rih repairing fl-nrl‘. vriess here. CASTELBERG'S 1004 F St. N.W. He whe hesitates ot tasted PABST- U Nea KEGUNED INSIST ON ORIGINAL PABST TAPaCan ® Brewery Goodness Sealed Right In ® Protected Flavor ® Non-refillable ® Flat Top—It Stacks ® Saves Half the Space ©® No Deposits to Pay ® No Bottles to Returr ©® Easy to Carry ® No Breakage PABSTéz=:BEER BREWERY GOODNESS SEALEZD RIGHNT IN SAVE 1 50% LEE & HADDINGTON 75 ] FELT HATS Were $3.50 Now 2 FALL SUITS Were $27.50 NOW GOODBYE WASH. D. C. SPORT COATS Wereup to $15 95 CAMEL HAIR Were $40 0'COAT BACK TO SCHOOL SUITS * % The “American” Party candidates are Amoco-Gas and Orange American Gas. Amoco- Gas is the original candidate in the special motor fuel field. It holds more official A.A.A. world’s records than any other gas or motor fuel. It costs a bit more by the gallon, but less by the mile. % %« The pride of the “Regular” Party is Orange American gas—clean-burning and the best at regular gas price. 0Odds & Ends Give Aways 486 Shirts & Shorts. Were 35c. 21¢; 5 for $1.00 18 Prs. Men's Mocha Gloves. Were $3.50. 434 Men’s Fine Hose. 0Odds & Ends Give Aways 3‘6 Arrow Dress Shirts. Waere $2.50. 76 White Silk Mutflers. $2.50. Now 62 Dress Bow Ties Were $1.00 Now 843 Shirts. White, fancy end de: tones. Were sold to $1.95. Now__ 73 Men's (white er black). 800 Men’s Full Size Hdkfs. White, fancy ond deep tone. Were 3Se. 18¢; 3 for 50¢ EYERS MENS SHO 1331 F STREET *Album and President Stamps are being given away free while they last at American Oil Company dealers and stations and Lord Baltimore Filling Stations. From Maine to Florida--Stop at The Sign of Greater Values! AMERICAN OIL COMPANY Also maker of Amoco. Motor Lubricants © Ameriean Oil Co. "M

Other pages from this issue: