Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
- SureRelief R lNPIfiESTlON ‘ (f ~ v MRS OGDEN LS REPORTE REWED NS @ — | Hot water |License Issued for Vander- [ SureRe bilt Stepdaughter to » E LI-'Ang Marry Sir Dukes. 25¢ und 75¢ Pagkages Evervwhers \ " Worrying Is Past |BRIDEGROOM WAR HERO 1t you have your papering and decorating @me by us—then, too, -no dust or incom- * wenlence. CORNELL WALL PAPER (€O, T14 13¢h VWL M. 5373-8474 l l Knighted for British Secret Serv- ice Work in Russia—Both Join Spiritualist Cult. By the Associated Press. - L iW YORK, October 18.—The re- cent issuance of a license at Nyack, N. Y., for the marriage of Mrs. Ogden L. Miflls, the former Margaret Ruth- erfobd, stepdaughter of the late Wil- llam K. Vanderbilt, and Sir Paul Dukes, British war hero, became known last night. = “Little could be learned of the events that preceded the issuance of the license, beyond the fact that both Mrs. Mills and Sir Dukes had for some time resided at the Braeburn Club, Nyack, the home of Dr. Pierre A. Ber- nard, leader of a spiritualistic cult, whose followers call him “The Um- nipotent Oom.” Dr. Bernard last night refused to be seen. The license, which was issued Octo- ber 3, gives the name of the bride- to-be as Margaret Stuyvesant Ruth- erford, daughter of Lewis Morris Rutherford, and her age as thirty. It When It’s Painting Paper Hanging: If you are in a hurry Phone Col. 1077 Harry W. Taylor 2333 18th St. N.W. . = ol MR SR SPECIAL NOTICES. . is postponed until Mewbers pleare tuke Command RRRE — 1% lis get forth that the marriage to I O haCAL NO. 3,0F | Sir Dukes is to be her second and . and cement fnishers, Thursday, O¢t- | 1ya¢ she procured a divorce in Paris. Representative Ogden L. Mills, ner first husband, is not mentioned in the documents. Sir Dukes’ residence is given as Nyack; his occupation is de- clared to be that of lecturer, and his age as thirty-three. His father, he sald, was the Rev. E. J. Dukes of Londan. banking house on MO] 12 o'clock noon, for the agreement of ‘con- avlidation between tne Federal Natioual Bank nd_ the American National Bank. under the rter of the former. and for the considera- of such other business as may properly betore the meeting. be open from 12 EDE ATIONAL BANK. POOLE, President. Deepening of Mystery. Two mnotices pub! in_yester- day's issue of a Nyack paper add to the mystery. unostentatiously placed, announces modestly that Sir Dukes has gone to England for a “two-week business trip, after which he will return for an American lec- N 2159 ture tour.” The other’ modestly sets RHARE. | forth that Mrs. Mills has left with her sister, Mrs. Cyril Hatch of Green- wich, Conn., for a month's trip to the west. Reports that Sir Paul and Lady Dukes had sailed on the Berengaria for London last Tuesday brought the statement from steamship officals that two reservations taken out in these names had been canceled. 1t later was reported that the honey- mooners had sailed on the Olympic last Saturday. Benjamin Haas, Nyack Jjustice of the peace, last night reluctantly ad- mitted that he knew of the mar- riage of Sir Dukes, but refused to announce when it occurred,- or to whom. Marriage Notice Not Filed. No copy of the marriage certificate, officially decreeing the performance of the ceremony, been returned to the county clerk's office, as re- quired by law. It was pointed out, <ontr x however, that this might be recorded 5 _ |at any time within thirty days after the ‘marriage. Mrs. Mills was married to Repre- sentative Mills in France, where he served as captain in the United States Army. She later obtained a_Paris divoree. TWith her shter, Mrs. Hatch, she received a large share of the estate of her stepfather, William K. Vanderbilt. Mrs. Mills is sald to have first met Sir Dukes in Petrograd, where he was serving his government in war secret service work. He is reported to have won his way into the confi- dence of the soviet officials, to have worked in a Russian munit.ons plant, o'clock noon to 1 ro - AND NEW YORK FOR 'RANSFER COMPANY, INC. AIN 21 SCIAL M 3 THE rs of the American National Bank of ington will be held at_ts banking hovee Monday. 1922 at 12 o'clock for the purpose of rarifylng the of dation between the Fe & OF the busin may properly come hefore the meetiog. will be open from 12 o'clock noon to MERICAN NATINSAL BANK. by W. THER. President. ALL _HEX’ M. "B. FLYNX NG_AND &1 Pa 19¢ HAVE DIRTY, el Chase, Md. Cleve 448 THOUSEHOLD GOODS TO CALIFORNIA AT rednced rates in our pool cars. = Next car Qc- tover 21st. SECURITY STORAGE COMPANY, street canncity. 105 Quincy CHEVY CHASE EX- T ; Genera! Auto Repairing 2 We specialize in Auto rianie | LS SPECAnzE making of Slip Cove’s and Tops, bu a'sh well equi] do_your VING . | goperal repairiag at” 85 R. McReynolds & Sons, Inc. Spec alists in Painting, S)ip Covers and Tope. 142% e T nw Maio 7228 Now Is the Time a Shin Roafs Repairs?. Fr 800. 19 t are in his work for the British secret service. His successes were said to have so incensed the bolsheviki that orders were given that he be shot on sight. He escaped over the Lettish bordet and returned to England, ‘where he was knighted for his work in Russia. He came to the United States last year to lecture, and a short time later was said to have Joined 'the spiritualistic cult at Nyack. P ———— CHINESE, CELEBRATING i~ POLISH HOLIDAY, FINED imghth Interpreter Succeeds in En- lightening Court on Cause of ‘Windéw Smashing. By tho Assoclated Press, NEW YORK, October 18.—Won Chen {Sing, Chinese' laundryman, arraigned !in Elssex Market court, charged with {flinging a flagon through a window in Michael Crowytz's saloon, protest- Ved for fteen minutes in a jargon no- OPPENHEIMER’S {body could understand. | Seven interpreters, with lknnwledge : et jof many languages and dialects, could Shos Ir:‘“’g“e | ot decipher a word of what hio said, : Streets Finally a spectator said he balleved __&*i)““ GL__ speakihg a strange Polish Executed by. this_house never disappoints. High grade but not high priced. offered to assist the court. vas accepted, and after half THE SERVICE SHOP, BYRON S. ADAMS. £iNE . Roof Men of Wide Experignce at your service to put the roof in perfect condition. e e e IRONCLAD fome 'gax s " Heating Plants Repaired .t us put your furnace, stoves or heating A+t 1o perfect condition %o vou will get all heat possible from your coal. K. FERGUSON; Dept. 1114 9th st. Ph. M. 2490-2491 NOTICE Stoves, Ranges and Furnaces B n Fiest-Class Condition iy the “Heating and Roofing Experts of w Steps, walks and_coping. Garage and cellar floors. ,_Lincoln 500 +#27 Tth §t. N.E. ® DIANTFIRE. RA| SHE Splendl ficlent S e 706 10th Firelace _Fixtures. The Million-Dolfar Printine Plant is equipped to handle ail printing jobs. ‘The National Capital Press MON2 D Have Your : i i Sewing Machine Cleaned, Adjusted and Repaired. | “Work guaranteed for one year. L. {Sing, though a Chinese, was born in i Poland, and spoke only Polish. Yesterday he, with three Polish- speaking Chinese comrades, went out to celebrate a holiday pecuilar to the | part of Poland whence he came. The iflinging of the flagon in the Polish saloon was just a bit of fun. Sing was fined and warned not to be too funny in the United States on Polish holldays. —_———— AMUNDSEN POLAR FLIGHT TO BE STARTED IN MAY { Capt. Cochran,” Coast Guard Serv { ice, Declares Explorer Will Spend . 5 ‘Winter in Nome. By the Associated Press. f 35 Years.” | _SEATTLE, Wash., October 18.— Reasonable Prices. _ _ { Capt. Roald Amundsen plans his flight {from Wainwright. Alaska, across the Grafton & Son, Inc,, l north pole next May or June, accord- ER. 11th St | ‘. Washington Loan & Trust Bldz. Maig 760.|yng to Capt. C. S. Cochran of the coast SAVE COAI . lKlllrd cutter Bear, which was-here today from a voyage of 23,000 miles by installing = into the Arctic ocean. Capt. Amund® son, who left here in the Bchooner ONEPIPE HEATER Maud in June, spent much time aboard the Bear in the arctic uees 15 Less Coal than ‘ordinary beating plan tess all. X4 1906, Capt. Cochran reports. Capt. Amundsen intends to go to team, and to return to Wainwright for his flight with Lieut. Oskar Om- dahl, he told Capt. Cochran. TO PRESERVE PULP WOOD. CHICAGO, October “18.—A foréstry committee from the lake states will co-operate with committees from other states in determining the best ‘methods of handling and preserving the- pulp wood forests to prpduce a ; | continuous supply fer thé paper mills, it was announced today at the Wood- land section of the American Paper and’ Pulp, Assoclation meetings here, The cut of pulp wood has been far below normal this year; according to the report of O. AL Porter, secretary of the Bection. - His. {nfo; on indi. cited that thbe “N;" Fngland mills have pulp wood fof only one year, in- y eighteen mon! Ice in the arctic is the worst since ts. ~ Costs Give order now to avold delay, whea ther gets cold- Lyon Conklin & Co., Inc." — e E st nw. Your Old Floors Dressed up mew. Also new fSoors ADAMS, 637 F v, _ Matn 1457. laid. ©C. 20% and even to have joined the red army | an hour’s talk the court learned that | Nome, Alaska, this winter by dog. o S THE EVENING / Staft Correspondent @ The Star. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J,, Octoher 18.—Letters from Mrs. Eleanor Mills to Dr. Edward Wheeler Hall in which she called him “my darling babykins" and expressed sentiments of her ap- | preciation “for “a noble man's deep. true, eternal love” were made public today by Prosecutor Beekman of Somerset county. The letters are part of the official papers in the investi- gation into the Hall-Mills murder mystery, which has baffled investiga- tors for more than a month. Previous claims that the letters ex- changed by Dr. Hall and Mrs. Mills were of platonic tone were exploded by the publication ot these letters. In them she speaks of ‘“delicious eclairs” which the rector bought for her and she referred to him time and time again as ‘“the priest.” The text of the letters follow: DEAREST, DEAREST BOY: Wasn't I happy to find{a sweel note, for I didn’t expect you would risk leaving one for me yeaterday. Such delicious eclairs. And the book is more inter- esting than you thought it would be. After I read it we will talk about it. My darling, how well you seemed today. I must have caught cold, but, I don't know when, and I am Ured, | today—want to lte’ down_ with you and rest for hours. And, honey, you put the dear pictures in my hymnal. 1 Oh, you sweet, adorable babykins of | mine. " Minnie used my hymnal for the jorgan, and I wonder if she saw them, {although I don’t care one bit, she provokes me so at times, and tonight, {if her flowers are still _here, Il put them in the kitchen. Not that I am ljealous of Minnie. Why, #darling, there isn't anything fo be jealous ofy But I hate her to do for you what I thought of first. She couldn’t. I swear I put flowers on your desk—she sur- mises it was L. Oh, poor Minnie; she is easily contented with crumbs, isn't she? < i BY DAN RING. Staring at Nothing. “How are you today, darling; you scemed rested and happy. We didn’t have a minute alone, but it will ap- i pear so-at times. £ “Dearest, I am not dreaming today. as I look out of the window.I form no thoughts in_my mind, just a drift- ing on, staring at nothing in particu- lar, and I always do that when I am tired. The note I left yesterday was scribbled, but I had to hide it in my small orange purse as I met him. And please excpse hastiness in writ- !ing sometimesfas I cannot be alone falways. How glad I am school re- | sumes sessions tomorrow and I can {be alone to write. I could never be- long to a club or go where there is incessant laughter and conversation. I need my dream times. my hours alone, and other people irritate and jalsturb me. “There isn’t much of interest fn the paper today. One line in an ar- {ticle says. ‘All life is hunger’ and | how true that is. A hunger for what will satisfy, but .what a variety of tastes in people. And because you {and 1 hunger for the same things Is the reagon for our longing to be to- gether as much as-possible. Deep Love and Musie. | “My love is deep, calm, quiet today. I am in a mood to listen to music. | Yesterday I was talking to Mrs i Burns. Couldn’t pass and not liste | 48 she was ready for conversation. | She was saying Some one next to | Hopkins was married yesterday, and | they were aueer people. { Hopkins they live in a different world than some people. Mrs. Burns i3 too ignorant to understand that, of course, and, my. I wish you had heara what disrespectful language that Mrs. B, used. But I let her rave. I hate to talk to the Burns, and never do € I can avoid it. But at tim i , even £ muet be polite, even If honey e 't/ this true. I live in a_differen | ond " Foday, I am not wide awake. I am not sad, but quiet. Yesterday 1 was rollicking—oh, I love those moods, they mean intense life fire. ! Of course, dear, the people Who live next to Hopkins really meant that they have different aims, conversa- tion, educations, intellect than some people, but Burns cannot understand that. What are the Burns? Ignorance that acreeches, the very. :ir is tainted with their warped minds. Cares Nothing for People. : h, darling, if I had an income o my own I would be very selfish, I guess. _I'd build a“waiting love nest { where I could dream unmolested and I not care if I ever saw people to talk to. Books and music, pictures, oh, what -treasures I would have. birds, butterflies, wild gtuirrels and 1 could see in the oods and fields as sky 48 my dream. | ¢ Tpcople would. mean nothing. T n they crawl along—don’t you love to watch an ant as. it creeps. along. Honey, there isn't a touse large enough for me. My dreams are as big as the eart] 1 t outdoors to vreathe—live Nature, as ‘cre- ated it, is what T feel a part of and I am a part of it—it cails' me just as year for the truest thing, l, darling sweetheart—Lthat is why~I long for our awve to be the truest—ideal—as poor as ‘we can make it—for thén it is truest e e But_this ‘love nest, you kuow, 3 ja dreadfully lonesome with just me there. Did He say we needed jewels, needed anything, ex- : STAR By ULUYAS WILLIAMS Gushing Love Missives : Call Rector “Babykins” Told Mrs, ! ° all rather watch thé bugs and ants as: WASHINGTON, B TRYING TO SORT THE ONE NICKEL IN YOUR- POCKET TROM SIX MATCHES, TWO CRUMPLED, DOLLAR BILLS, FOUR PENNIES, FIVE KEYS, ONE TPEN- KNIFE AND THREE RUBBER BANDS Copyright, 1922, by The Wheeler Syndicate, Inc. jGod oreating’ all these wonders for us. Darling, I could rave for hours, | but I must stop as there are papers around. I only know this, dear, that las God the Creator is real, true, na- { ture 18 real, true, so our love I8 a { most vital power, the truest joy, that { can be known in this life and hereaft- - er. Please don't laugh at this. I | know I am a crazy, cat, but I cannot | be different. €harlotte talks—then Dan asks questions, then-he annoys, 80 how can I write.” Unexpected Pleasure. DARLING MINE: Didn't you feel' me purring, blissfully contented and close to you, too? Was my good-bye to the others too hasty and should 1 have said more? What a truly,un jexpected pleasure it was dearest, sweetest boy. Oh, how good you! are. As I rode along 1 thought, iis is where I find my greatest joy te. be near my man: what care I for what other people call pleasure—to be near you, although I didn't dare to look at my noble boy's face, this! jis all I ask. How friendly our| Easton avenue road seems to us, and, | { dear, dearest boy, every time you take | vour hat off I never fail to notice | and can read your face. Monday, i message ol' love every time you do, and my heart | sings for joy. Yes, 1 could filng my arms about you and pour kisses on ! !'my babykin's head and face. Grand-! {ma is here. I must stop. Sweetheart. ! my true heart, I could crush you—, h, I'm wild ‘tonight, ' so happy I! could dance wildly. (Names referred : to in following letter are characters | in the book by Robert Keable, “The | Mother of All Living.”) i I don't know why I feel this way | today—it will pass as you know. God. ; 1 know—oh, I know as much as I {know you are my true heart—that He is watching and caring and we are never alone. He is always near—in whatever we do, even in physical ' closeness he is near, for we Know i He meant His children to taste! deeply of all things. i Had Net Found “Soul.” | was Pam religlous? Did she feel {God? Yes I think so, but she hadn’t {found her soul. Nor did Chris. Chris | wasn't Cecil's mate no more than |Hugh. The Chris she thought he i was? he was her true mate. I am the | resurection and the' life—and if he! jknew that, then there would be! painless but a praverful life—a de-! gire to be like his always forever beloved Cecil. 1 have much work I ought to do, but I cannot today. I must walt until this mood passes and I come down,_to { earth again. Do I love you too much? T know that now I could leave, ves, even your physical presence and go {into a convent. You are always in my mind and heart, but there I; wouldn't see any one else but you, call you ‘“dear,” rub your tired! body, “sew your torn trousers, Oh,! darling, T don't ever want to call-you “dear,” or “honey,” again if any one: else ean. I am so glad no .one | else but you can call me dear names. | {One time I told you I hated your, work, I hated your parish.> I guess it | is because I am jealous of it, because | it must always come first in your life. | Not because of conventions—no—but because you love it go. When the man | tat the“gate at Manhattan Beach called you “doctor,” and I, without | looking at you (I'm a witch), knew it thrilled you, the kind of a thrill| that brings tears of joy to your eyes. 1Oh, I know it is because you are a | “D.” { ways cherish and love the Chris sh C., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1922. F i1 ASYITAL TONATION By the Ausoclated Press. NEW YORK, October 18—Delay in enactment of _the' administration’s ship subsidy bill would mean “playing into the hand” of foreign shipping | interests, whose opposition to the legislation should make clear to the American pedple that it is vital to the future of their merchant fnarine, Commissioner. Plummer of the United States Shipping Boara declared in an address today- before the convention of Industrial engincers on board the steamship President Harding here. Gives Foreigners a. Chance. “To delay enactment of the bill” Commigsioner Plummer said, “means giving the forelgn interests a chance | to improve their ficets while our idle ships are steadily depreciating: it | means letting them get a grip on.our business while we stand by and ‘Jab- ber’; it means taking from us the op- portunity which our war-built fleet had given the country, and the con- tinued outlay of $25,000,000 & year caring for property that we won't let earn a cent, while constantly increas. ing the cost of any merchant marine that we may undertake to establish at a later date. Should we indulge our competitors to that extent? — what is the truest fact. You say we are favored by having such a great love. But always—it is so and will ever be—we must always take the bitter with the sweet. And I hope' I don’t see you today. What {is the use, when you always leave me. O, my darling babykins, what a muddle we are in. But I will be content. I will. 3 On Her Knees to Him. Dearest, dearest boy of mine, good morning. What joy and peace is ours to- day. And strength. How graclous God is to privilege us to know this most joyous, greatest blessing. Precious true heart, 1 will write -this afternoon when I wiil have more WILL EXPUNGE RECORD Evangelical Association Takes Ac- tion on the Breach Created. Thirty Yeais Ago. DETROIT, Mich, October, 18.—All record of the schism in the Evangelical Church thirty years ago are to be ex- punged, under a decision reached by the Evangelical ‘Association General Confer- ence here yesterday. The.two branches of the church were recently united and the conference now in session is the first since the union. . Four bishops of the Evangelical Asso- clation Church and one of the ted Evangelical Church were re-elected. They are Bishops 8. C. Breyfogle, G. Heinfiller, L. H. Saeger, S. P. Spreng and M. T. Mase. The sixth to be chosen a bishop was I. F. Dunlap, representing the Central OF SCHISM IN CHURCH | Pennsylvania Conference, of Lewis- burg, Pa. d Thomas Bowman, eighty-four years old, of AHentowr, the “grand old { man" of ths conf was clected superannuated bigh Invitations for’ the; next meedng of conference, fouf_yea™s hence, were recelved from Elgin, ll., and Williams- port, Sentiment apparently favored selection of the Penggyivania city. De- cision will be made probably today. AUTO RACE PILOT JAILED. Ralph De Palma Also Fined $100 for Speeding. FRESNO, Calif., October 18.—Ralph dva Palma, automobile race pilot, was sentenced to ten days in jail and fined $100 by a justice in Chowchill, Ma- dera county, when de Palma pleaded gullty to a charge of speedin Officers declared de Palma was trav- eling seventy miles an hour. What Yesterday’s Question: home-made? time. I am on my knees, darling, looking up at my noble man, worshiping, adoring. Wonder of wonders—that I love you even more than yesterduy—more ! fragrart, this love of ours. was getting, a true, noble Chris. But he wasn't then. Love made him what he was In the end—a true lover—but in finding himself he lost what he prized most—Cecil's wonder love. Says God In Watching. Oh, of course, he was true to Cecil,| §rx O'CLOCK. physically, but he was tempted; and| Oh. gdarling, darling mine, what a ‘real man mever can be. How T!painful hours today. Vhen 1 got hated him. Surely. across the dark-|jack from church, in addition to my ness of the night Cecil’s God was|piin T was 8o troubled about you. guiding her—her love made her real-! Ax [ told you I didn't speak a word ize why she told Chris to wait. Helio any one, got undressed and sat was unworthy of such a complete!iy 5 rocker, not peace anywhere. I love. He was more to her than God | yucse T was weak from the pain and Tpthe child. ~Humans forget some | no sleep last night. Soon' I became time God is watching and guiding. ' drowsy and lay down and slept for How comple elv she loved. Rn the When I awoke torturous true voice of that great love showed | I cannot tell you how it has ier the ‘ruth- ‘hai Chrix wasn't|pained. I was alone then and had worthy. Her ideals she would al-ino one to telephone to you. cw you would be thought he was, but he dragged him- | self through the mud, tempted by | physical passions, and so deserved to lose Cecil, although she would love him forever. And Cecil was clever. : She knew by having another child she would see her duty to Hugh and | not for a weak moment be blinded into going away with Chris, and so | she used that way to prevent her- | Pamela got him, but with hi: ideal love burned into his heart and | Py dearie. you Rnow tniife 1¢ a| 13, 4nd Eive me something to put &irl wanted as she wanted Chris she | we rel%lgn;;%ln:zd e “you felt inia ‘wouldn’'t save herself for him. They rning, and get some relief from all smoke and drink tea incessantly. ; constant pain. 1 never felt so If I should read’three pages of the ! piccrable as 1 do now. You asked :::(')“ke ;r‘;t)l:ou! lme}ns the ,aufl;;”fnw did 1 want you to come. Hon thought she was clever, but wus hey | mine, I was needing you as only vou If Chris had taken her offer he would | ke vy am e ™as here. and so I sala hate Pam in the morning. I can! A g easily see that a man would be weak. | MWD CE L But in life, dear, you know there are; Tomorrow, I believe, I'll walk miles many things to teckon with. nd be alone. Darling. can I bear it? would her father take to her livi My ears ach The pain goes to with Chris? Wouldn't she have cHil- ; the top of m Worse than be- : | fore, for I am sick over the disap- en? v poi .tment of not seeing you. It pains s0 at times 1 stumble in walking around here. and almost fell. it doesn’t turn our mind I don’t know. altho truly, dear, it isn't as painful-as it w ling 1 walked the floor until 4:30. Haven't read the paper, haven't eaten hing. I said, On, he will know T am suffering and cannot come up. When 1 came back Miss Opie’ was sicker than before disappointed. n Altho now the pain isn't ten minutes. 1 wish some one would be merciful Longing ‘for Love. DEARIE—it is late—therc_is so much about in the book. We must take it with us when we ride _talk about it, especially the marked places. | This man Keable certainly knows people’s hearts. I love Cecil's few hours together. vows he will kiss her before leaving Mallory’s. Oh, it is sweet, darling: but nothing compared to our love. How they linger behind the others, their love vows, and how they rush jnto each other's arms. ake the hook with you—or else I will leave it in your room. I don’t want to read such books again, ever. | Why? You know. They make me dream. Yearning for what. perhaps, 1 miss in this life. And to think now and hereafter I will never escape this longing until our souls are at last one. I hate to come back to realities —as I always have to. Reading books (oh, I love them!) makes me vearn, and as much as I love it—why does it pain to have to come back to even taking food for nourishment? So 1 long for the time when I will have you forever and dream, dreams—no yenrnings. “All earth's longings now fuifilled?” | Yesterday I was happy. in a way. On the boat and In the water. But on the way home 1 was thinking hard, | and fold me close, if on | this pain for a moment. cure me now but that. I was tempted to drink enough to put me (o sieep, but 1 am strong enough to realize it would do uncurable harm to the kidney Degrest, give me some word of com- fort. Tell me you know I was wild to come to you this afternoon, but 1 couldn’t. It will take the pain of disappointment to leave me. My darling, who cares every moment and suffers with me. Just look at you tonight will be a relief and joy. 1 don't care how much it pains, T will bear it and come to meet you. to forget More of Mrs. Mills’ letters to Dr. 11 wvill be found in tomorrow’s Star. "PETWORTH. darling; it is as if we have had a ! glimpse of What our souls cry out for ! i ost and then be denied again. And i Wahw:M 2 feel as though I never want to hear ! Progressive Residential you say again “I love you” or caress. 3 or kiss me So hard it hurts. You Section haven't any right to, and then wake | me up. Or is it myself? - INSPECT When any one else calls you an| endearing name and you say “dear,” | it s far more merciful of you to stab | 4217 4th st. N.w. me. How can I even call you “dar NEAR GRANT CIRCLE ling,” as I have this morning. 0,'T ought not make it harder for 6 Rooms 20 Ft. Wide Brick Porch Columns | true priest—born for it—and because | it is your supreme joy and_sati faction. I am merely. your. physical inspiration and you see in me what you teach—you, the priest. Love Story Discussed. { DEAREST. how fast I can read. I re- imemher, too, honey mine, what a lot { there is to talk about-after reading i the book. / { Pamela is clever, the kind of wom< ian that keeps a man guessing. She knew she loved Chris from the begin- ning—she saw in Cecil what Chris loved—would she really have let him jtouch her body or would she recoil {at the last moment and be disgusted jor disappointed in him. She meant {to' have him—fair or foul—and she [ was too clever to let Cecil have him, ifor didn’t she read he was a man iworth having. But not until Cecil | made him so. He is the winner, for i Cecil’s great, pure love made him.per- { feet, but not for Cecil. For Pamela. § And Cecil's great, all-knowipg love told her he was unworthy of sher love. Perhaps If she had never. known of his trek with Pam (although shg would have found out the real Chris {some time) she would cast everything | aside and take what she thought she NEW YORK SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA , WALTER DAMROSCH Conductor S you—but that is what you do to -me ! and' I am not repaying, just stating | Concrete Steps Floor Sockets Parquet Floors 4 Closeéts - Large Porches Open Until 9 P.M. Take 16th St. Bus Marked “Grant Circle,” or any 9th St. car marked “Soldiecs’ Home.” D. J. Dunigan 1321 N. Y. Ave. Main 1267 Mass Meeting First Congregational Church Tonight at 8 : s —Auspices of _ . Washington Federation of Churches - “Prominent Speakers Dr. Roy B. Guild of New York Dr: John M. Moore of Brooklyn | Bishop James Cannon, Jr., of Norfolk - The International Y. M. C. A. et Will Sing -~ DOORS OPEN AT 7 inuous as it was, it ceases for about} i I want you—your arms to hold me | othing will | W rd) il Middaugh & Builder—Exclusive Agent—Owner. , 15th and H Sts. Main 6935 hours for | i i H Containing seven million front. open to 6 p.m. Woodward Build lot more. Surrounded by Washington’s finest residential section. getet of forest-covered land, with six miles of improved streets. Includes what remains of “The Triangle of Increasing Values” between Connecticut, Massachusetts and Cathedral ave- nues (Woodley Rd.). Over three million feet of land sold. Over seventy homes from $15000 to $200,000 built and under construction. Wooded villa sites, lots and finished homes of brick and tile, with lots from 50 to 115 feet Park Office: 32d and Cathedral Ave. (Woodley J Money Back If Anything Is Wrong Top coats—a necessity You need them five months'of the year. We urge you to compare the style, fit, tailor- work and the value of these Top Coats with any other top coats selling for as little—or a Hart Schaffner & Marx to’p coats 40 . Raleigh Haberdasher 1109-1111 Pennsylvania Avenue about the home bakers The answer to above question will appear in this space tomotrow. Is Bond as good as The Answer: Many housewives say so, but we only claim that it is as pure as home- made, and that we use all our skill to BY THE GENERAL BAKING COMPANY Massachusetts Park Shannon, Inc.