Evening Star Newspaper, January 12, 1923, Page 31

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Tells How to Strong, Thi Make Hair Grow & and Lustrous. | because baldness usus lct and any one who gives the sealp little attention should always have un abundance of good-looking, bealthy hair. { Dandruff aud dirt causo baldness by clogging the pores in the scalp, and giving the dandruff germs fertile ground for pro- lific breeding. The treatment is very simple; rvemove the dirt by -shampooing and destroy the ! dandruft germs by applylng the genuine Parlsian_Ssge, a most efficient antiseptle | ilquid that drogglsts everswhere ‘are now | fecolumendiog us oue of the quickest and ST_trestments to surely stop itching N ha wse all dundruff and to properly nourish and invig Lair roor arisian Sage eriminat rlum ¥ comes from ne Changes at Boston After Week’s Probe. By the Associated Press. BOSTON, January 12.—Col. Charle Torhes national director of th United States Vet ans’ Bureau, ha: ington, after clean ing up what he ha huracterizedas th ‘mess of intrigu petty poli at the head » ate the s fu great demand by dis. use it i daintily o or_strenk th ~s und luster that ration. ~ Peo- it to yo md fes” ingland uarters. ‘ect of his inquir: the past weel nto ADD VALUE TO YOUR HOME . ity, but t HY HAVING IT PAIV one gullty, ROPERLY BY OUR EXPERT 1iapethe, follow R. K. Ferguson, 5. Brides, widely know Dept all player and coach . 5 Su00.2101. oy declare n. d not guilty of multipl Paintin 1114 9¢h St | practice signation ace |ed. anda co J. Herbert | Worcester appointed temporarily Lis place. Capt. Blake Relleved. 3 = } 4 e " Capt. William J. a Prescription for Colds,|director charged b, 3 G2 : lack of co-operatic ever and LaGrippe. It's the|io report at Washington most speedy remedy we know, preventing Pneumonia. . nd_inefficien 1 for reas to report at Washington for re-as assignment; Malcolm Stoddard, chie of the subdivision at Portland, Me ordered here in his d. Dr, David S. Flanagan, chief medi | cal oficer, under charges of inefi = | ciency and lack of co-operation, whick | were not heard LULUHLI UL A e dquarters Winthrop to succe EDUCATIONAL. T T red to report to ashington: . advanc for rea ed to suc him temporarily Co-Ordination Chief Relleved. Guy Doherty, chief of co-ordination ed and ordered to report n for i nmen ughnessy, a clerk, declared nd dropped from the bureau under tempos or ced on probation for h word that it must p by Col. Stenography—Commercial Secretarial—! Service Spanish by Native Teachers Day Sessions Night Sessions Late Afternoon Sessions LT es said he had found in false am ns through ting alike en artments. ions remedied, p clean on his re The offices themselves, uld be removed from district where th ained at a rental of $15 to the Army base, whe: be kept for $9,00 —_— AMPLIFIER AIDS DEAF. trigue and yut the 1 721 Thirteenth Street N.W. Tn g T = ! the busine LT TRV EE llllllllfif' GEORGE WASHINGTON |coua UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL " they the secor Burrou dTeprnoa cla | Experiments K Street N.W. ! Adding Caleul. Nw - | ment Will Be Continued. Bookkeep- | . ng School. Sain 2700, | | The I TEWARD . | fi SCHOOL [ ek persons Accredited a suc Lar I | flllllllllllllllsl. Ohio, January 12, d Condo ti public amplifier, room of Te pro to Cincir *hool which w taught, was pronour after three boys, ced ected to the test. The climax came when | ence Timmer, seventeen irl who has been deaf since artled Ler examiners b; tonishment a; bi | fler. }ever 1t was the first sound she hieard, the superintende e cxperiments will be con aid. nued. ent upon. request. Steward School 1202 F St. N.W. i ent of chilled me T t to Europe way of the Panama MUSICAL INSTRUCTION. i { | MESS CLEANED P Col. Forbes invokes Many! New | The ef- of relieved from further Dr. | to Forbes at the end his | With New Instru- : un amplifier as a means | g of enabling deuf persons to hear, has | according superintendent of s installed school where deaf two of a | whom could hear slightly, were sub- | Miss Flor- ear-old th, : a cry of as. | yiew Supt. Condon spoke to ! { her through the medium of an ampli- had canada recently made its first ship- | 1 by WASHINGTON, D, FRIDAY, J AS TEEET R (Continued from Yesterday's Star.) l Under her gaze he began to find ©Xcuses and explanations for himself and his behavior. Don’t you remember telling me in that letter of yours that you were not quite the same as other girls, putting that forward as a sufficlent reason for breaking faiths with me? Well, Pansy, I'm not quite the same as the other men you've known. To begin with, my re n is different. In my own small way I'm a king. ~|1 rule absolutely within u_radius of more than a hundred d!here. Then, I'm e|{my trading’ extends | Kingdom. as far as St. And millionaires, more especially jthey're men and unmarried, are fote I welcomed everywhere. And, like kings, milllonaires can do no wrong. Then I'm half Arab, half Frenc Which you must agree is a wild c bination. Such a doesn’t tend to make a ma virtu- ous. I've done ex: | practically ever since | Everybody, except my their best 'to spoil me. s e s e 4 exactly. I was born. mother, did o She was the o lin order when teen I " | vight in an was ten w. but sh rs old. At was sultan here in my And no one ever troubled to criticize my doin you came along. And now yo {Pecting me to be a better man th cver fate or nature intended me a fou own or an him, view, I call ‘trifing’ what you've done h wme. Promising to marry me and | then drawing back. 1've never trifle with You. And if you can believe a thing, and if vou'll try and see it in my light, I've been faithful to you. never had ‘a thought for anothe woman since the night you came into it until 1 learned you were clay’s daughter. Then I tried to| ate you, and went back to my old | ¥ said nothing; she still looked at trying now to' see his point of | £ on of the Sahara A Modern Story of the Desert (Copyright, 1922, by the Macaulay Oe. By Louise Gerard smus - | with which his own death would have what I liked, | jonly one who ever tried to keep me | who had his daughter was a king, if a barbaric one, and cfvilized to a certain extent. She had not fallen into the clutch of that grimy, naked, foaming wretch, as he had im- agined. And the knowledge eased his | tortured spirit considerably. svuasssaseseg | = CHAPTER XXVI After that interview with her cap- tor Pansy’s life rapidly developed into one long struggle between inclina- tion and upbringing. She knew she loved the sultan, but 1l her standards revolted ugainst marrying him, to think about the wild past that was his, but she equally could not bear to think that ho might fall into sin again when hers was the power to prevent him. What was more, she knew he had | guessed her love for him and was | doing his best to make her succumb onee | to his attractions Afte v, “and he knew her in Grand Canary THe fact of Pan! acquaintance with the Sultan Casim Ammeh, Bar- clay had learned from Cameron in the early days of their capture. The younger man immediately had recog- nized the sultan as Raoul Le Breton, who when out of Africa posed as 4 French millionaire. “He's worse than a savage,” one of other officers put in, “since he s better. rge had nothing t. told. ¥ him: into dre o say. before ased him musements been as nothing to_do One morning the sale of slaves, of guards brought him a letter. To his amazement, he daughter's 1g on the env With trembling fingers he o |it, wonderink how she had to get u message through to him, with a prayer in his heart that by some | miracle she might have escaped her ! horrible fate. No one | you must {count. I trie to you before, never reac { another. v except just th and fight heér battle And he harder. h, e ail assed and b He the but nd- would her in the little walled linger with her among ¢ the hour he would sit llery over- king the Very often he dined with her in the gilded chamber g {and stayed on afterwards in the dim better than T how |yign¢ of th lamps, watching suffered on my ace|jcr with soft, mocking e to get a letter through | "4, ‘very often he would but I have just heard | l\.i)," Pansy, have you made up 1 you. so I am sending | .yr' mind whether you are going to 4. {marry me or not” the | T Cecmed to th a was combi into the arms of : !turn from with cont | - and mop ALth than 1 am | asked the sultan to let you all go back to Gambia, but he will not c sent to that. But he has promised that you all will be well treated. “You must not worry because of e. It is not as if the sultaw and I ere strangers. T met him in Grand > v, but I did not know who he cally Was then: he was passing under "rench name, “It is very difficult to knovw to Fay to c you up big upon garden and sold t day in &i ‘ & to drive h mpt and disgust. nd of a fortnight he said: ono oo has ever fought against her lov me. It's an amusing sight beginning to wish etermined fighter. At the end ol mockery had g for but I'm ou weren't such a month some of the e out of his eyes, ving place to eam. For {the girl had not succumbed to his fascinations, although her face was growing white and w h_close confinement and the ce battle that went on within herself. ‘And the man who acknowledged no ¥ what 1 know you life. But when you were brought to ,dead. as I thought, 1 knew 1| e you. And since that day. | s¥, there's been no other womun ' i You. And you'll satisfy me | the rest of my life.” | Pansy listened to him, trying to see | | things as he saw them, knowing she { OugNt 1o be disgusted with him. In 1d, she w ad died twenty y But his eech brought her father's | | plight before her again. It seemed | | hardly feasible that the sultan would | sent her letter to the man he ired to punish Did you give that note of mine to my father?” she asked A trifle askance, he glanced at her I didn’t,” he confessed. Pans past being angry | him; she was just sorely wc soul and mind at his doings. ‘This must have showed on her face for he went on quickly “You can send s ago. | de 1 | { 3 with | nded in | | | Not oniy that, and friends will Among other things. You've daken the edge off my | but that your father - ba well treated. | He pau {, “I'm grantin but what me? | Pansy | over her he u all these going to do fo I nothing now but to right away, be ond his reach, but not because ated him. “Just for a lish heart moment, my little Eng- will you rest upon m: e asked in a soft, caressing voice. “There’s no sav left i me when You're there cord. He held out complete the barg: quick waiting tc she moved sald. alarm in her You've never been af ore, Why are you now you afraid you might How could I love any ved?" she asked ¥ one so de- pra But_her voi | scorntul as she | Deprave: now, is it? 1 suppose. etter tha ou hate me. turned towards the desk, an t paper and envelopes. Write your letter, little girl,” Le finished. Pansy sat down. s she wrote to h art was a w that she had been left undisturbed in her fool's paradise, that she had married Raoul Le Breton at the end of a month, knowing noth- & about him except that she loved him. quavering, no ded it to be. at's what I an it's all point of d it father, in her time in 20 Lessons 32: Main SCHOOL OF _ WASHINGTO | 1408 N. H. Ave. Method, | ALl Branches Ca OF MUSIC Fusin 1304 1 M AL Private Lessous _in Tangua, *1, $1.30. B strect ww plays read and produced. classes in 3 Children’s Expression Class Winter Term begins January 15 Estelle Allen Studio i Cultivation of Speaking Voice. | 1614 Eye St. N.W. ient location. Franklin 1 NATIONAL, SCHOOL FINE =W i & APPLIED ART RESORTS. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. 2'ELIX MAHONY, Director, Main 1760 2 Conn. Ave.and M | W S *Study Art '!v.'u. a P(l:xlrpue" : Day and Evening Classes ' ATLANTIC CITY, N.g. o, Seioedey Clawe | o o Ao pia ol Fundamental Course fits you_n::::g' on the ocean front. io accept a position in ln-",_"‘"’c_".‘;‘_'.f:‘?':,__lfl’ggg_‘fifl_(grz! terior Decoration, Costume | - z]}AY}’IO Packing, Shipping, General Hauling. First-class service—Reasonable rate 143442 U Street N.W. Phone N. 8845, ED BALL TRANSIT National Household Movers, urgh. CO. 2162, and Textile Design, Color or ) Commercial Drawing. Classes Now Forming Beginning January 8th — Pace Institute Lecture- Homer S. Pace, C. P. A. (N.Y.), will deliver the first special lecture of this year at Pace Institute, on Monday, January 15, at 5:30 P.M. Thesubject of the lecture will be— “The Analysis of Financial Statements” Mr. Pace’s lecture will be preliminary to the formation of the first midwinter class in Accountancy and Business Administration (Semester A). Secure tickets of admission to Mr. Pace’s lecture and the Institute Bulletin— telephone Main 8260. Pace & Pace 715 G Street, N. W. ‘Washington, D. C. Christensen | WASHINGTON CONSERVATORY M. 7858 | circ PACKING & : STORAGE| Once he was her husband, if she had learned the truth, she would not have had to fight against herself and him. | There would have been only one e left open to her—to do her utmost ake a better man of him. And umstances had shown her that in her hands the task would have been | an casy or t CHAPTER XXV. When ir George Barclay returned to prison, he was a broken man. His' rs were surprised to see him| | alive, and anxious to hear what | had occurred. But a day or two| passed before he was able to talk {about what had happened. And al’ | ways before him was the bestial fig- |ure of the miser feather merchant, into whose hands he imagined his daughter had fallen. When he told the story of her sale | a strained silence fell on his officers. lence that Cameron brok: “The d (RSSSARLRS ARSI SRS | 1 of iz A SON i. SAHARA o 5 7 Read the Complete Book - For Sale For Rent ® P osias | 3 + PEARLMAN’S BOOK SHOP 2 933 G St- Near Corner 10th & G Sts. IR F AR RR RN FREPFFEEys l | | 2 ATLANTIC | CITY 1 lorlds Greatest Hotel Success | Cooksin 20 minutes TO six cupfuls of furionsly boiling water in a large saucepan add one teaspoonful of salt. Slowly shake in | one cupful of Comet Rice. When again :fMll boiling, cook rapidly un- covered for twenty minutes. The grains should then be soft. Drain througha sieve, place this over the saucepan, and set on the back of the stove for 2 few minutes. Packed in Sealed Packages ‘— never sold loose » | oughly will worry whatever 1 say. 1 am quite safc here and no harm will happen to me. [ cannot bear to think f vou worrying, and you must try “Your loving daught “PANSY. Barclay a seemed to him had happened. ad bartered herself in ex iis life and the lives of he He tried to gather law except his ow appetites and | who, up till now, had lived for noth- loved the girl all the more | ecause she did not succumb | ttractions, because she had | ! ul above her € live up to her own ideal; to come down to his level. felt he must try and up to the hei =, usly he was ng refusing times grope his d uncon- | from the A he Geor letter it new what through that he | he a0 o fends. | d ris ter can _always reach the lev fort he could by keeping th ure rises from,” Pansy had once sai f the sultan before him ad! Although wild ‘craving for his last seen him, big and handsome, in | girl prisoner often kept him wakeful, | ihaki riding suit, looking thor-;aithough there was none to stop him. | luropean. At least the man'and only a short length of passage The Utmost in Real Tea Quality— . jit Imitations are number- less,but the Quality has never been equalled. , JANUARY 12, She could not bear | ut her lover | 1 that the whole ,’ an she ought U,; “Pansy, you're the first woman who | 1923, gz " —— and a locked door, to which he alone had the key, lay between him and his desire, the passage was never crossed, the door never unlocked. possible, Pansy spent a lot of her iime in the big hall of the harem i with the other girls. But, one by | {one, they disuppeared, to become the | S€ | wives of various men of importance | ginia |in the place, until only Rayma was | Supreme Court left—a quiet, subdued Rayma, who | watched Panky and the sultan with | longing, envious gaze. | “How happy you must be now you {are his wite and you know that he { can't thrust you from him should an- other woman take his fancy,” the Arab girl sighed one day to her rival. Pansy was not his wife, and had no intention of being. In desire to escape from temptation grew absolutely reckless. “I should be much happier could get right away from him,” |said In response to Rayma’s remark “Don’t you love him?" Rayma ex- claimed. “I hate him,” her heart. again, in she her she e S she Pansy said, lying to “I'never want to see him she went on in a hysterical way. L only want to escape from ' him and this place, once and for- i ever.” Astonished, Rayma gazed at supplanter. Then a look darted into her dark ey If_only | | this #trange girl were out of the way the sultan’s heart might return her of hope To clean out arets! {tree from | biliousness, colds A church of Santa Rosa, Calif,, was|acid, gassy stomach built from the wood of a single red-| One or two wood tree. and visited Grandma on the farm— s and tried to | Oh, the pancakes she made for you! If you want those good old-fashioned pancakes, use That's what will make them. It's the same today as it was in Grandma's time—the same perfect mixture of wheat, corn Heckers' Old Homestead Pancake cMixture, and rice flours, with sugar, salt and leavening. cMixture, add water and bake, and you'll have as 2ood a batch of pancakes as you ever tasted. THE HECKER CEREAL CO., NEW YORK Black Green or Mixed Blends JUST TRY A SAMPLE Hus Four Out of Five Pay the Penalty— TakeHeed of Bleeding Gums First, bleeding gums — Then comes Pyorrhea. Neglect means lost teeth, broken health. Don't takeschances: the odds are too heavy against you. Pyorrhea strikes four persons out of - every five past forty, and thousands younger, too. Go to your dentist for tooth and gum inspection. Brush your teeth with Forhan’s For the Gums. If used consistently and used in time, this dentifrice will prevent Pyorrhea or check its progress. Forhan’s For the Gums is the formula of R. J. Forhan, D. D. S. Used as a dentifrice, it will keep your teeth white and clean and your gums firm and healthy. Itis pleasant to the taste. At all druggists, 35¢ and 60c in tubes. OR THE GUMS More than a tooth paste Pyorrhea Formula of R. J. Forhen, D. D. S. Forhan Company, New York Forhan's Limited, Montres! SON SUES MRS. FLOOD. To escape his presence as much as Action Is Brought in Behalf of Minor to Sell Property. Senator Claude A, Swanson of Vir- |1 today filed suit in the behalf your bowels without | cramping or overacting, take You want to feel fine | Byrd Flood, seven-year-old son of the late Représentative H. D. Flood against the latter's widow Fortner Flood daughter, to dower and to 5 in Belair Heights. purchase has been District! W Cahill. Attorne of Bolling | pears for the senator. IOF IF SICK, TAKE “CASCARETS" Clean Your Bowels! End Headache, Biliousness, Cold Dizziness, Sour, Gassy Stomach start the at night, bowels ac the bowels e morning When t eas ri wonder- ; to be quickly | venlenc sick headache, o bad breath, a sour- constipation Cascarets, any time, will dizziness 1, salts cent boxes, Any drug tore OLD HOMLSTEAD PANCAKE MIXTURL THOSE sharp winter days when you were a youngster Just take a packape of Heckers' Old Homestead Pancake ives permanent because itis ALL BRAN! 'With the most dangerous diseases tlose on the trail of sufferers from ‘constipation, there’s no time to waste on foods with a low bran content! The one answer to constipation is BRAN that is ALL BRAN! That’s why you should eat Kellogg’s—and eat it regularly; at least two table- spoonfuls daily; as much with each meal in chronic cases! KELLOGG’S BRAN IS SCIENTIFICALLY PREPARED TO RELIEVE SUF- FERING HUMANITY AS NO OTHER FOOD CAN! g Don’t delay a minute! Getstarted on Kellogg’s Bran to-day and your health will steadily improve and bowel conditions return to normal, no matter how long you have suffered with constipation, mild or chronic. Remember that Kellogg’s Bran is not an artificial laxative, but nature’s own bulk food that acts as sweeper, cleanser and purifier. Its work for health is wonderful! Besides, bran contains the most valuable mineral galts and other life-sustaining ele- ments—it is a blood maker and bone and tissue-builder! Kellogg’s Bran, being cooked and krumbled, is delicious eaten as a cereal, or sprinkled on hot or cold cereals. Another happy way to serve Kellogg’s Bran is to cook it with your favorite hot cereal. In preparation, add two tablespoonfuls of bran for each person, cooking the cereal as usual, You can make the most delightful muffins, raisin bread, pancakes, maca- Tooms, etc., with Kellogg’s Bran— and it’s fine in gravies, soups and Pw The big thing is o get started on Kellogg'isg Bran quickly—for the sake of the health of your entire family—AND SERVE IT REGU- LARLY! First-class hotelsand clubs serve Kellogg’s Bran in individual packages. Ask for it at your res- taurant! All grocers sell Kellogg’s Bran.

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