Evening Star Newspaper, December 6, 1925, Page 52

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THE D. 1( king him. 1le decided she wasn't. ; *I used to think.” he said. “that my mission in life was to love women, | but T was mistaken. I've learned that it is better to love one woman, and put whatever qualities I have in her trust. So far I have considered wom- ‘:n\ Yh‘l’ e. 1‘[\!,[ T've said all Ih:llI “The Gracious Gift of God” (e By H. L. GATES STAR, WASHINGTON, C.. DECEMBER TWO OLD ACTRESSES STAGE “COME-BACK” Lottie Venne and Ellaline Terriss | SUNDAY 6. 1925—-PART 1. 1 ! DUE TO NERVE PLEXUS. —m spondence of the Associated Press BY MARY BLAKE. ‘ PARI ovember 20.-—Modern girls | who fall a-trembling at the prospect of | R hmlmrhnld chores do not, it would ap- | e car, merit the strictures heaped upon | They llllln) by women of an older genera | tion. | They are really suffering from latent alterations of the cervico-brachial 0 | nerve plexus, dn( lared Di to | signs | the Paris Medical Society. one by one —what are the things they are saying Another man might have hesitated because of the irony hidden in the | glrl's voice, but young Dorminster was filled with his grievance. *“The usual thing,” he answered, “about the inci- dent of the Russiar You left the grounds with him at 11 o'clock, just when his party was at its height, | greed, “hut you land you didn’t show up until hours inflectidn into |later. The prince invariably mixes some vile Russian concoction in his punch, and in his brandies, and eve: one had more than enough of both. Their brains were receptive to only one conclusion when you showed up DOUBLE-DECKER STREET. First of Kind in Chicago Displace $3,000,000 Plant CHICAGO, December cago's first double-decked street i nearing completion as $2,000,000 | hardware plant, the last building fn it« path, gives way to a wrecker g When completed the street, loc: tion can be diagnosed, added the phy-[on the south bank of the Chic sician, and successfully treated. That | River, will be known as Wa is, of course, if the young woman ! Drive and will represent an expend | would be willing to part with the ail- ture of $20.000,008 for the one . | ment. of its length What Tomorrow Means to You | | 1 | Are Now Appearing in London Hits. Correspondence of the “] Press JLONDON, November 20— Two old} ‘tresses are adding color and interest to London’s theatric: Lottie Venne, came to the Tomorrow are | ). —Chi se until a little after noon. | then \ge, and, although not active- favorab rather benign, | good emotional vibrations. is concerned, the better only to at- planetary laave | “You have," she = [ always put some new | it ‘ “You are zood to look upon, Teddy, | about as handsome as @ man ought I... b 1 you are good to listen to Assox Iy become with fa denote that it were tend to that which is customar h- out seeking “fresh flelds or p new.” There will be lacking optimism ind self-confidenc both of which are drove | reauired if any new venture is to be a | e et e e but | Success. There will be sensed a spirit she hus returned and ts starring with | OF dissatisfaction and unrst, and polse . will be needed to overcome the effects | Sevmour, icks, in “The Man In Dress | o ,g untoward Influence. The indi- | s i oton il sy esaath point to happiness in social | J out “Work-at least an old-tine 1 in the afternoon ‘or eve jcannot,” she said. I am afraid th Bl ot ma | actors of the younger school think T8 om0 OF Rave . d it will prove to be a | more about golf and society than they # & it the atage .l ha sodlety than they | pitious vccasion for “troth plighting Childeen born tomerrow - are des s for actors to walk through ir parts in the casiest way possible | ined: according to the astrological and avoid large theaters where they =5U% '"”"“f",l'v“"f"““ ot g have to raise their voices and work | PGHPG With Hthle oF B0 By o onlts Fan 5 culties. Care should be taken during really. hard to _get 58 adolescence to aveid the taking Dame Ellen Terry, so well known to | Spances. os there is more to be feur o "“('“ through her many appear-| from aecident than from illness. Tem ances with the late Sir Henry Irving. ;o mentally, they will be boisterous, | is not playing. but still is a 'frequent | frank. trathful and loyal. As & re to the theaters. Her eyes sUll| o1 of their exuberant i > the sparkle which enc 1 her | will not Bo vers cousider others as Portla and shé carries herself with ' (¢hace nerves may not be i the gal grace which distn: | (heir own. They will not display 2 uisk work on the world stage | cpecial aptitude for work or study, b | for nearly half a century will e outdoor pastimes. i they will tone down cc sider espected m beis of an in which th may live. 1T tomors f {mind is put ' and was as work say you are in love. If I Mau 1 sper_and Henry r shall We Join the *at His Majesty’s theater ven yews ago ill health the shorter of the two stutements. She did not examine the | listed items, but only the total. Then she crumpled this portion of her ac ounting into a wad and called Marie. o me o candle, lizhted, ple | she commande While Marie held the tiny flame be. fore her Jounna held the crumpled | wad of paper over it until her ting scorched, then dropped it into candlestick. She watched until the paper ball ha burned Before she would let Marie take the iy she stirred them into powder with he: fin; s if she would run no risk of prying eye out a secret from | the cindered payer. The othe wecounting she bore a long list of bIS paid by the bank, she tossed into a dr: Then, with her riding crop slapping | smartly along her leg, she went out. Villa Amette had long been one of the show places of the Riviera, one of those splendid miniature palaces which nestle in the semi-tropical foliage of e of Cap Martin—a low, ram- zlanced at CHAPTER XXIL Gossip. dressing of J g when th: rded to The each mor son condesc the hands ¢ portant cere berse mati m im It was not a mat- Martha the ever-depe personal required 1 who wis o fingers we tilet rituals of regnant he: . which | her | curl and v wer. | brown hair which th: treat. Ma what w lips must arch 1 T ehcibpeniaton W when with what rds broad slope from tc ners and f 1o the ne the hill in serried terraces themselves in zroves of + and mimosa. | i was t blue Mediterra nean < of square o a Lung the ot i & Why Jones Quit Banking From the Kansas City T A Scotsman can i whether he would lose i he withdrew a dollar to tit back OrTo! ou s Newy thut” wound Uukmg] o i Celeste watched over the | with fragrant clematis. Only the very i H 2 a ) ments her mist rich, and of these only those whose y / ol s whims were for splendor, ever had e | braved the cost of a - et e {the Villa Amette. Bt Joania | Yvonne once before S ite hat this palatial estate. Now she agked to do anything I say I'll do. It it at her suggestion, with Aoiid be. thoroughly impossible.” Yvonne and Joanna were inseparable, /- S While Tord Dorminster waited |and vet there had been few conti: | ; | Mader Riv olives, ol of the and asked ny interest birthd. a our visi wd impulsive, is v "he formu plans causes you pleas execution_affords vou bundant enjoyment. If. too. re be emgountered difficulties in consummation, you are never ch conditions vour ‘flmv~ through to ind and she on the k, “Your loving wite, Dorothy A customer coniplained hecause | didn’t pay interest on his overdraft I advertised “Consult your banker” and somebody thought 1 meant i Indians Take Domestic Science. rote over such her her 1 with told we | should their dishe cause fou must ad tenant am not to be | SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN’ - Gpmuine 5 of stubbornne When you see the “Bayer Cross™ on tablets, vou ar n. although always am £ome place on the spacious ground of | dences between them. Villa Amette, Celeste and Marie pre i her riding togs and Jéanna er morning's _post through gers. Only - letter interested 1 When she came to is one she dropped the others into »ut the or . Cele velashes, hrongh all th watched each velope that boy of the bank i Ie It came amiliar ¢ York. People learned that to approach the Girl they first must win the vonne Coutant. And they great deal because of th nee. With a groom holding the 1 the two horses. Dorminste Jounni at the steps of a great that opened onto the driveway the time she came out to him he w sullen. Joanna’s eyes danced when she saw his mood. Ie helped her mount, tossing her to her saddle as ily s it she were a feather, and turned their horses into the road idles of ited | doo; She made no effort to turn, however, and they rode for a while silently. were married I couldn't resist you, & know.” Anger mutte “Oh protested soning about you me take you serio [ wonder why and he u.” she 1St ven always make ana ou You know } adopted rouge and hobbed | have ;;ctting’ the gcnu%nc Bayver .‘\~]_7i_riu proved lions and prescribed by physiciar Colds Headache rsuasion wewhat e by - to fluttery, even thoygh fed esome doses. are demonstr ALBUQUERQUI suscep- | Dece v 5 (®).—Ind : having Mex., ce 1 maidens, vou s over t tive in you ken up domestic 1 devoted te department scie of culin Neuritis Lumbago A tion has been established —_— his lips, Ha 1. BEspecially you took rnment Kenilworth's handiwork Indian ven classes keenly school he Indian interested Pain Neuralgia Toothache =~ Rheumatism DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART but whatever his hes| stubbornly put them Yvonne Coutant,” aside he said, Shie was shaped her to fiz Whenever she strug f him he bends a 1 ks. It's ge inning to do that to (Conyright. 1 7 (Continued in 10 her b the lor Teddy Dorn with Yvonne he country home: rished relativ d revels in Par recognized i carefuily went th She would put maids were fini “she could di at the mon her ey would leap 1 memor thing very that either crossed the frontier and went on to San Remo along the sea or led back to Mentome and Mon: “It 18 too late,” Dorminster wr or as long a ride as San Re o the other way, down decent sort until he his fanci Lo get 1 hecanse much talking the ade Kenil- and the “The obvious a am actually that I don't about today from one Riviera to the other-yo last nizht with Prince Mick worth's fascination for you aff e jed 1 11d iike climax in Jounna Uthe count 1 every side. slowly. delibe » : 1o Ventimiglia make | went out of her an uglier scandal out of it because they no other s know that when Yvonne gets readv When she to turn there'll be kind of ! examination turned again beside her “I hate or it any & ECZEMA CAN BE CURED Free Proof To You AllTw T name and address 60 I can send yru a free trial treatm, want you just to $ry this treauneni—that's aii—just ¢ryit. That'smy only argument. DRUGGIST I'Ve been in the Retail Drug Business for 20 years. I served four years as a member of the Indiana State Board of Pharmacy and five years as President of the Retail Druggists’ Association. Nearly everyone in Fort Wayne knows me and knows about my successful treatment. Over Thirty-Five Thousand Men, Women and Children outside of Fort Wayne, have, according to their own statements, been cured bythis treatment since I first wmade this offer public. If you have Eczema, Itch, Salt Rheum, Tetter—never mind how bad—my treat- ment has cured the worst ‘e me a chance to prove my claim. Send me your name and address or the coupon below and gt the trialtreatment I want tosend you FREE. The wonders accomplished in your own case will be proof. - — e CUT AND MAIL TODAY < e e e s e same J. C. HUTZELL, Druggist, No. 5035 West Main St., Fort Wayne, Ind. Plrase send without cost or obligation to me your Free Proof Treatment swer s, him away from Yvonne.” Why ‘especially’ for that. Teddy? It gave them « chance to figure in_how many of Yve have taken away Michael was the ot them all Accept only ‘Bayer” package which conmins proven directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets, Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists ure of Monoaceticacidester of Salicslicarid during & where piloted her, | n London, to f many of his di a4 throu 1 Yvonne : what they & end of ag r vou Prir You've concl from Scy last of them, ] Aspirin s the trade mark of Bayer Masu she not ke assured to be to this cularly g0 no unless you I want morning. I haven't | engaging thoughts.” | “T have,” he answered sho on ahe ol CIone |y ThouEhts T Tenton to ol <till. Her mind | about this morning, especiaily nd out of her |last night.” Diccesstonilof) re you going to remind me again She Was | of such foolish things as I may have : shaling of | said to vou last n S Ly this pars ade. othing. In |go straightaway back. Roddy will be eyery letter she with that |around someplace by now, wanting his of the bank on the outside she |tennis.™ feared there might be the wiping| She away of all the myst of her m ever, or. pe its explanation. he | to h Kpew, gleston had not | with encouraged her in this belief, that the | the s explanation would come some day. And always she wanted to be p pa;iv‘.‘n.’fln y ill a sinister low | who had ever been in the bac l} ground, | ‘I’HI toyed w "\ her in New York, had | wheneve she re- adually had wrap- | net about her | gled her. Kenil- | 1 to her- en- | imes earnest | tely bitter— place. decide be any »ugh a set ritual. aside until her h her or unti ¢ was n from | “IUs t she to you after ¥, | some a ndscape ckward who nmon a ad happened n There's Roddy | rode | What are they | i | Put Part of Your C hristmas Savings Into A Beautiful, Useful and Efficient New 5‘ree‘Westmqhouse ELECTRIC SEWING MACHINE And Save gossip, Te 1s eith way il me? Give it | ve about it.” te moodily true lisn't He waited biting de no eff. they rode fc t to turn, how | a while, horse | silenely. Joanna, buoyant vouth, tooK long breuths of . lazy breeze that stole up But when Dorminster at last she swept him with a glance. he thought of last night that bothers me is not so much vour for- | getfulness, as the memory of others. | i at I want to talk about.’ She didn't reply, nor did he tinue. They rode in silence aw until they turned into w bridle path that went in among the trees in the Condamine, a path that once had guided the Romans under (aesar to the hiding place of the Christian slave who has since become St. De- | vote, the patron saint of a sanctuary | erected over the spot where she w: captured and killed. It is a narrow | path. The horses brushed each other | s they threaded it. Suddenly Joanna ! women and | ise of me m | to sce if she were | her et pulsed hin, ped which |lnmw g worth had been devot a1, brooding, some etimes n "‘"‘”’T: ha l\ll lost his head. | Kenilworth had said, that fist night | that he was going to She had accepted the | d ceased playing and struggling to brealk | ttlements. rolled her. This admit in the end. pe would remember conflict. She had item in her store ! or lure | ch time Both 1to his and too dan- against. His S is J. C. HUTZELL allens Was frank through .But B she must Once or twice they had had drawn upon ever ¥ ice and had gambled ¢ and_e; ou love me very much, Teddy?" he answered, don't you again shortly, Name Age. true, almost, isn't that you have s<he top- being Post +ifice. | ped lov loved by them bec: He glanced at her, FLORIDA PORVENIR Fortunes Made by Wise Investors {gmes b Street and No. ciyes that we gerous for her to fight cbscure but seen malicious power dominated her becaus bt risk tempting him. he had through the passing of the year & veighed the meaning of each ste 1ts influence upon her she would open Yer letter and read it. . As usual, what she feared was not in the one that Marie had handed her swhile Teddy Dorminster walted some place out on the grounds. It included, However aph which she read aver and ovel Al these letters from the bank were dictated by Eg on himself. He was always the sarp cold, precise, rinblv he began “Dear She read ith a statement of i of this sepa rding to your into two divisions. Perh ahock the lonzer one. which includes | jtems paid by vour order. T have care. fully checked the expenditures lismd on the second statement and find them | Gorrect. You will Big Investors in Florida IAM1 is the Florida Giant, and Porvenir is the largest and most fashion- able development south of the Magic City. Only thirty miles distant, it lies partly within the city limits of Homestead, social and com- mercial center of the famous, Redlands fruit and agricul- tural district. Homestead is a delightful residen- tial city of great and growing com- mercial importance . . . churches, stores, schools . on the Florida East Coast Railway . . . on the Overseas Highway to Key West . . on the Seaboard Air Line Rail- way now being built from Palm Beach. Porvenir is moderately restricted and fully improved with paved streets, sidewalks, sewers, water, electricity and fruit trees to go with lot. PORVENI There is no better proof of steadily increasing values than resales which are being made at a profit. T. W. Theus bought aPORVENIR lot for $2,000 on August 10 anc on October 28, before the second payment b came due, sold it to Harry Au- gitis for $2,666. E. C. Crowley bought two lots from Crow & Smith at an advance of $500 each. S. A. Turner in two months made $666 profit in the sale of a lot to C. A. West These are only a few who have made quick turnovers. Many more investors in PORVENIR have refused resales, some at much larger profits. The only i these profits 1s to buy. Whether o wish to sell your property or retain it, you may be assured of having made sound investment. PORVENIR is M ami's foremost surburban develen. ment south of Coral Gables. It destined to be to Miami what Pa: dena is to Los Angeles. Compare prices of Pasadena lots twent; s ax0 and tod PORVENIR will mot Florida property instead of stocks and bonds is draw- ing the investments today of the wealthiest and most prominent men in the coun- try. The list of those who have bought property run- ning into the tens of thou- sands of acres and millions of dollars include: Henry Ford W. G. McAdoo Jesse Livermore Gen. Coleman du Pont Cyrus H. K. Curtis Edward Bok Roger Babson W. J. Forgan Frank A. Vanderlip John D. Rockefeller Miss M ‘I ine vour rated, date in-tructions, ps vou will notice that with these statements your account would be se- mously depleted, but I am to inform wvou that your benefactor has notified me that a substantial further deposit will be made to your credit. You may assume, therefore, that any require- ments you may e will be met promptly. T remain, Very truly your: “ANDREW BGGLESTO! { When she understood the meaning | of that last paragraph. that she need. | ed more money and It was being given Mer by the same unknown. and in the me unexplained way, Joanna hastily PERPETUAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION PAYS 5% Compounded Semi-Annually Commencing January 1, Assets Over $10,500,000 Surplus $1,000,000 Cor. 11th & E Sts. N.W. JAMES BERRY, President JOSHUA W. CARR, Sec’y. Desk and Console Model Machines Now Bein g Used as Floor Samples and Demonstrators — Regularly Priced $124 and Higher—at a $30 Reduction! —THere is your chance to own a beautiful Free-Westing- house Electric Sewing Machine! Every one of the fifty in this sale—and the offer is limited to fiftv—is mechani- cally perfect. They are simply a tiny bit marred or scratched—in some cases! Every machine is equipped with the built-in head sewing lamp—and there are oak and walnut and mahogany finishes. Come early! They’ll go quickly at so great a saving. All you need to pay is— $2 Down! $2,000 - $2,500 - $3,000 Only One-Sixth Cash Balance in Five Semi- Annual Payments Balar in C ice in Convenient Weekly Payments (T W S S S R S S W S —— S ——— — THE PORVENIR CO., G-5 HOMESTEAD, FLA. o GENTLEMEN: 9 “The Busy 8th and D Please send me further information about Porvemir. This will not obligate me in any way. P A enna. ve. NAME ADDRESS CITY | s

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