Motion Picture Magazine (Aug 1923-Jan 1924)

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T "MOTION PICTURE 01 I MAGAZINE 1 SAY <4 BAYER" when you buy. Insist! Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets, you are not getting the genuine Bayer product prescribed by physicians over 23 years and proved safe by millions for ■*S& Colds Headache Toothache Rheumatism Neuritis Lumbago Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proper directions. Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets — Also bottles of 24 and 100 — Druggists. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid WORLD'S BEST ARMS! Luger Pistols, barrels 4, 6, 8, 12 and 16 inches; Mauser Pistols, long barrels; holsterstocksfor both. Mauser Springfield and Mannlicher Schoenauer sporting rifles. Catalog "D" ten . PACIFIC ARMS CORP., Liberty Bank Bldg., San Francisco, Cat. You can be quickly cured, if you STAMMER ' Send 10 cents for 288-page book on Stammering and Stuttering, "Its Cause and Cure." It tells how I cured myself after stammering 20 yrs. B. N. 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Special Arrangements for Lessons if Vou Have Your Own Instrument Special Courses under famous Teach ers, Tenor-Banjo, Violin, BanjoUkelele ana Ukelele. Fine Toned Instruments FREE1 You will bo £> delighted hT\ -*. fii&ft with the fine W *O^H tone of this \ NJM splendid Ha \ waiian Guitar \ U. \ .^4 t I " . Flrat Hawaiian Conservatory of Music, Inc., | Desk 41, 283 Broadway ( Woolworth Bldtr.) NewYork Send me at once details about your 62 easy lessons and | FREE Hawaiian Guitar offer I I Name ......... ..., | Address , , , Ju„... ■■■■..■■■,...■■., I Town _ State. print name and addrcso clearly. cipitated first, it would seem, death and disaster, and finally triumph and happiness. Phillip insisted upon being admitted to the locked chamber. John, of course, refused him. Phillip drew his sword and in the combat ran it thru John's side. The young Don fell with a heavy crash to the floor and as Phillip started back, old General Mendoza ran into the room, in search of the missing Dolores. There, before him, lay John, dead, and over him, his murderer, Phillip, King of Spain. The General, as has been shown, was first of all a soldier of Spain. That its King should be so dishonored was unthinkable. "Sire," he said, with the snap decision of his training, "I shall tell the people that I, not you, are the murderer of Don John. Better that I should die for a crime not my own than that you should be dishonored. And then with simple heroism, General Mendoza told the Court that, in a quarrel, he had killed Don John. He had not time to hear the hisses of the crowd before a dishevelled figure sprang to his side. Dolores, her eyes were wild, the sort of distraught wildness that comes from having been too long tormented. "Grandees of Spain," she cried, "my father has lied to you. I cannot tell you why he has done this thing, but I know that he is not the murderer of Don John. You ask me how I know this thing? I know because I was in my lover's rooms tonight and saw the whole affair. I will pay for my father's life with my dishonor." When Dolores turned, weeping, to leave the scene of now riotous disorder she sought the King. "Sire," she said, when she had gained entrance to the King, "I know who killed Don John, i was in his rooms tonight, which was why he would not permit you entry into the inner chamber. If you do not liberate my father, I shall tell what I saw with my own eyes and heard with my own ears. My father is dearer to me even than the King of Spain." In the chamber of Don John, whither Dolores now turned, to weep her most bitter tears, she found Inez bending over him and heard that he was living. But she was never to know that she surprised Inez kissing the lips she loved — the lips that were denied her. Outside the palace of the King the crowds, having heard red rumors, were surging and crying, "Long live Don John !" They helped John to a chair and he whispered her name and Inez, having bathed his brow with her soft tears, stepped back into the shadows, while Dolores attended him. Then John made his difficult way to the window and bowed acknowledgment to the shouting throngs. The King stepped beside them and under pressure of diplomacy welcomed his brother "back to life," who had so lately thought him dead. Don John with bent knees acknowledged the royal favor and then said, "Sire, if you are really glad, you will grant me this favor I ask of you, your permission to wed Dolores, my Beloved." Dolores' great eyes were upon him. In them the coward monarch read that his acquiescence was the just price of her silence. If, now, he should withhold what Death had twice restored to her she would reveal at any cost what she had seen in the apartment of Don John, Phillip raised his hand and publicly wished them well. In the court-yard glad cries were heard. To the Hero the Fair. John was their well-beloved and the gentle Dolores had ever found fond favor in their eyes. But within the palace John and Dolores heard neither shout nor cry. Their hearts closed out the world. 88