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WRC TO FEATURE GAPITAL ARTISTS Crandall’s Saturday Nighters Also Announce Varied Program of Music. ‘Washington artists will be featured on the radio program to be broadcast tonight Ly station WRC. At 830 o'clock a joint recital by Elvina Rowe, soprano, and R. Deane Shure. pianist, will be presented from the Park and at 9:10 o'clock a two-piano recital by Kath- erine Floe nd Charlotte Klefn wiil from the studios of th Kitt Piano Co. In addits y four local artists, two other Washingtonians will be heard in the third and final series of performances by the “Stars In Dominos The procram Godfrey trallan o'clock, and Hamilton at Talks road studios, “ullen broadcast omer L. New York features on the il be a recital by inguished Aus- to 10:3 Cosmo violin by in. be will H. | Pepartment « Begi Saturday Nigh for an hour ar the alr nd will in n the a group ¢ violin une ) due v Daniel Breeskin recita- tions by by rtie Fay prano; George Anderson, Otto F. Beck, organist; sele the Metropoli- tan Symphon hestra, the Imperial Male Quartet und a trio composed of Sigmund Preston Shelley and Emile Smith Following the Saturday Nighters Village Orchestra will ce music. ved by the - direction of tain listeners {11 be continued Boernstein’s estra. Lee House Tt Samuel Udri from 6 to trom 7 Hotel W LocalRadioEntertainment Saturdav, Dec. 12, 1925. NAA—Naval Radio Station, Radio, Va. 15 Meters) Weather Thireau repo lureau repor s. Chesapeake Te'ephone Co. Sitent and Potomae 5 Meters). WRC—Radio Corporation of (468.5 Meters). D Lee House Trio direction of Samuel Udrin, from the Lee Hous 8:45 p.m.-—Marke pared by Department eulture 7 pm 1 rashington Or 8 under the broadeast summary, of pre- the Agri wernstein’s Hotel hestra, broadeast from Risl of the solicitor under Bible Lab Cosmo station " by Austin H. Clark, under the auspices of the Smithsonian Institution 8:30 p.n.—Joint recital by Elvina Rowe, soprano, and R. Deane Shure, planist and accompanist. 9 pm.—"The Business Value of Beauty,” by George H. Carter, public printer of the United States. 9:10 p.am.—Two-piano recital by Katherine Floe Cullen and Char- lotte Klein broadeast fro the Homer L. Kitt studio 9:40 p.m.—"'Stars in 16:10 p.m.—-Ge cast from st 10:30 p.m Nighters,” in. recitationist; Daniel Breeskin, violin- ist, and Viola Abrams, harpist, in duets; George Anderson, tenor; Artie Fay Guilford, soprano; Imperial Male Quartet, a_trio composed of Sigmund Ziebel, violinist; Preston Shelley, cel- list, and Emile Smith, planist; Otto F. Beck, organist; Crandall's Tivoll The- ater, and the Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Danfel Breeskin. 12 (midnight)— Orchestra, broadc taurant Madrillon. Dominos.™ Ludlow, w York. Saturday Adams, he Spanish Village st from the Res- TEMPORARY AUTHORITY FOR SEVEN STATIONS Secretary Hoover Approves Appli- cations Pending Consideration of Regular Licenses to Broadcast. The following broadcusting stations have been granted temporary author- ity by Secretary Hoover to broadcast, pending the consideration of their regular licenses. In the meantime, these stations are inspected and logged for interference, if any, which will be a vital factor in determining whether or not they will be regularly leensed. None of these stations is actually new; all of them were bullt and ready to operate and had filed applications prior to the recent radio conference. Wave Power. length. of Jacksonville i 336.0 WBATL, Baltimore. Md."" Con- lidated Gae & Elec, 3748 RV0D Bristow. O 3 3748 203 228.9 267.7 2142 KMMJ. Clay Cents Johnson Co. WDAH _El Paso. Tex.: Trinity Methodist Chirch. ... ... KFXR. Oklahoma City: Clas: Film Finishing Co. .. RADIO’S BEST OFFERINGS TONIGHT. First concert of Liederkranz Society, WGY and WJZ, 8:30 o'clock. Concert from the Eastern State Penitentiary, WIP, 8:30 to 11 o'clock. Novelty program by Ev. Jones and the Coo Coo Club, WTAM, 9 to 12 o'clock. Warner's Theater program, WGBS, 9:20 to 10:30 o'clock. St. Louis Symphony Orches- tra, KSD, 9:30 o'clock. “Crandal’s Saturday Night- ers” WRC, 10:30 to 12 o'clock. Dance program by Vincent Lopez and his orchestra, WEATF, 11 to 12 o'clock. America | "} 10:15—New 4 TO 4:00—) oston: Shepard Colonial Orchostr o Orchestra-.....oizoo . New York: Banjo” soloists Orehes 5 Philadelphia; *The chool Dramatic Club 4:00—Kunmae s Stars scring Trio o Philadelphia 4:40—Philadelphia: Police reports. organ A TO York: Hotel Lorraine Orchestru Chicago: Soloists: Valentino Orchest Chicago: Tea time at WGN: musical Louisville: Currin 6:20—Philadelphi Tabor al t Buolt o the Wise Men- Cunritt a 70 man’ 8:00—New Ci 6:00—Philadelphia: Recital: New York: Hotel Waldor!-As Boston: The Smilers: Shepard Colo New York New York Philade ote) 8:15—Newaric chee: Vincent S er Uncle hia: Wei talk: sports nsem . Dinner concert Chigago: Skeezix time for kiddies: n fladelphia: Bellevue 6:45—Atiantic City: Organ Davenport: Chimes concert Avanport Pliladelphia: Bellovue-Stratford Hot: Clicago: Organ reclt < emble and Blackatone String Qu New York: Vocal and i New York: The A New ' York: Dance lesson dith- Roth Trio York: Bernhard Levito T Win's 'a Orchestra tione Chicako: Or; instrumental soloi | Moosebeart 11 New omc Sy ¢ Hotel News finan ing's ts: markets. Bob husic Tsrie 3 Trio: vocal i ‘Sriler’ Orebestia i Conoars, brogram e Goidkatie's OFehests capolia: Biiey's st Paul Hotel Bon: Besior's et ity Eactirn Phuiadeiphia Philadelphia hiladelphia Bosion: P Nalne” i _ Newark: Ven's Collestane 7:45—Schencotady’ Bridge lesson ¢ 8:00—Newark, Resding: planist: . Miami Beach, F Dance Atlantic City: Seaside HM:; ’fl oo Bunlo}'\ htK lckerbocker Club and New York Police’ Gies Clul 2 Soneert = Ben Bernie's Orchestra Philadelphia: Sports: talk: lio. b, ell Oviofinie ork | WeatAeld B Nzatetn Blke. Se% YO Taront edent Philadeiphia: Octave Chib Choris Atlante City New Jerser WS, gans land Kitty Mitchell's Irlah Program from WJZ. Y.: Vocal and vielin ko school Tesson: vocal solos Cincinnati Chicsgs Eiiab WLS Co cago . Luilabs time: WLS Tten's Minsirele 3 Chicago: Ratph W illiama nd o, Tonial wolotsts 70 Faute: “Orieszs “and Contral Theat 18—Memphis: Bedivhe stones. L SOV el e W ik ba Angeire’ Examiner orosian Fort “Worth: htcmienonimstional Tnusical nrokrs e Louisville: Bamay Rapp's Orchestra Fittaburgh: Conrert by Philudeiphia: o » TO < Angelas: Motorlogie talks | | 9:00—Pntladelptia | Band iincannaty Cleveland: Novelty program by Ev | Club: other artists Philadelphia: Readings by Edna M planist .. .. S £ New York: Vocal snios: Cinderella D New York: Elsa Hoebn and Lisa ner's Theater program New York: Hotel Rooe: Hour New York Boston Newark 1t Orchest Instrumental selections Artinta from the Beacon ent Talk: St. Elizabeth lis: Fireside philosophios: m Dinner conowrt 9:15—San Francisco: Sports: markets 2 Wal 8:30—Chicago- Vocal and inatrumental Schenectady : Reed Chicago: “'Congress Classic'" Memphis: Musical program St. Louis: Sympbony Orchestra from 10 TO 10:00—Chicago: Theater review New York: renorts FPhiladelphs New York Atlantic City: Nick Los Angeles: Quartet: Stark Duvennort— Musical program Comedy program: gton Hotel Orches Los Angeles: Talk: organ concert York . Planis Dream Girl . Newark: News: Willl 10:30—Chicako: Moulln Orchestra Four Red Hot Peppers Chicago: Je'ke Entert:iners: awaiian Trio Aecordion solos 1. Musi Kitchen 11 P.M. TO 1 11:00—New York: Motion 100w ¢ Crystal Paface” Orchestrd ork: Tos Aneles: Featurs program . San Francisco: Cabiria Otchestra Minneapo'i Orchent Chicago g Xl a; Organ recital from Ge 1 Elietanair: " Marlon, McKay's Orches i T2 'Varied musical B Los Abe Examiner p Wurtzbach's Orehest privec: hurisbacy’s Ornestcs x “The Jewett Jeators Ko tnmony i v Batte ro Knmond, Kl . Yot Bevenport: Vocai 'and instramen Hotel Orchestra e Chicago: Edgewater Beach ot e “‘Congres Classi: a0 Dalias: Adolphus Hotel Orchestrs . Portland: Dance program ...... 12:46—Kausas City: Nighthawk frolic: Plan solotsts 1:00—Chicago: Angeles: Mooseheart. Chicago: Pat i : Settin:up hour: m: £:00—Los Angeles Anacice: Hollrwood Blearo: “Tnsomnta. Crub" BARGE SINKS; SAILOR AND YACHT ARE LOST Lighter Craft, Valued at $20,000, Goes Down—Leak Believed Cause of Loss. By the Associated Pross. WILMINGTON, N. C. December 12.—After battling with a strong gale and heavy seas for several hours, a derrick barge being towed from Nor- folk, Va., to Miami, Fla., by the sea- going tug Goliath of the Wood Towing Co. of Norfolk capsized when about 15 miles off Cape Fear, near the Fr. ing Pan Shoals, Thursday morning. A negro known to Capt. George D. Hodges of the tug as Armstrong was lost. Capt. Hodges said he maneuver- ed about the place where the barge capsized for some time, but the body never came to the surface. The 50-foot yacht Omeida, valued at $20,060, and the property of Cacace Bros. of Norfolk, stevedores, on the deck of the barge, was lost. The yacht Iwu being shipped to Florida, where members of the Cacace family are ‘Wintering. Capt. Hodges said the barge was the last on the tow line of three, and he was not in a position to say just what cpused it to capsize. He be- lieved, however, it was leaking. 1 National Radio Report in Print. The proceedings and recommenda- tions of the fourth national radio con- ference is now in' press at the Govern- ment Printing Office, and will soon be offered to the public by the superin- tendent of documents, &t & nominal 'w York: Norman Strutt and his Four Towers Orcheatra WEAF ‘Nickels Tri Deceiving Widow Orchestra: market. ‘s Orchestrs Hotel Hollenden Orchestra . ... Olvott Vail and_his orchestra dinner concert by Benjamin market reports ‘Westinghonse ‘Band ttord Hotel Orchostr 7:00—Atlantic City: Hotel Ambassador Orchest: D News: sports: bedtime storl dinper concert by Drake Hotal En- Cathay Concert Orcheatra Maine—Its Advantages and Po St. Elizabeth Glee Club. Salt 'and Pepner Boys: organ concert: SacKatary from Otterbein_ Home College Glen tic Fisheries Association banquet . program ... WG Dallas: The Teghle Clef Club. vocal and instrumenial artists WEAA Hamaker's Hotel Van Curler organ_reci| Paul_Specht's Orchestra i Arrowhead Inn Orchestra ¢ Fiction by Frances Real fcture review and incent Lopez and his orcl Weather and market repo Ra'ph Williams and ‘his orcheel . ropram D1o¢ w ot "Ernie Golden's Hotel McAlpir " ‘songs . o Merry 01d" Chief 12 MIDNIGHT TO 1 AM. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1925 Programs of Distant Stations Scheduled for Eastern Standard Time Stations. Meters. Miles. 4915 204 5 P.M. e Copley Plaza Hotel o\ ;" Hotel Lorraine tudio Entertainers . trumpets & P.M. market " e rogTAm S tatk reporte. 7P stttz 2EER58 torey's Orchi @ g Jacques Jacol markets " £ 825232 & =R33EA AR AN < rsssess 2B85: P.M. by S Orehestri P tintet Jlof e = g3 g2 s cam = 325 £23 223 [y 25, police al address: organ: plano se Sizing” Hotel La Salle Orchest wongs [ ! and final market reports; children’ and’ instrumental seiec Orchestra. >> 2>, W PRER! B0 @O»>O 2 i3t R MRACORms SR EER Ban vocal solos ... violin solos. Sunshine: Aswociation of Real Estato Boards: Caried musical program’’."" : eolos: "Bl cwater Beach ‘Hotsl Oriole” Orchestra; WEBH WLW Sunday ~ school ieseon Piano oios: news. Westinghouse Band . wit Teller Light Opera Co. . 10 P Potash_and Perimutta; torial perod” Lebanon, Jones and the Snyder! Lore ance Orchestra Sherwood, duets. War tra: ‘talk: Radic 'Men's, : Tene LR ~rtainment Club usical Vocal and instrumental artists Jean Goldkette's Serenadere Pratt and Frederick Yale-Harvard College program demar Orchestra. .. ... WGN or Wi LKY! the Odeon . nem Detrolt: Jean Goldkette's Orchestra .. Boston: Copley Plaza Hotel Orchestra: songs voos Torture: police and’ weather, L ¢ Masters fram ol icho'e Dance Orchestra . 3 e String’ Trio and the § solos Y i % i §288 4 32 2 MIDNIGHT. P e B KTt o torsrs 28282 % Susse & syasy EREAZ0S1 £ LESSE 5 BEets 3 Dtk o i LOMRR @ rmantown Theater tra: other features. rosram “Carntvai” tation 170 2 AM. Yocal und nstrumental artist Radio Club: musical program ‘Ankeles: Hotel Ambassador Orchestrs usic Barnes” “Your Hour League® 2 TO 3 AM. Musical program; Charles de Laney, master of ceremonies, frolie. lultngfl\mfll 6 am. . 3 Coon-Sauders’ “Nirhthaw] PROSECUTION TO BE AIDED IN YOUTH’S SECOND TRIAL Assistant Attorney Genmeral 0. L. Smith of Michigen to Aid in Rich Case. By the Associated Press. BATTLE CREEK, Mich., Decem- ber 12.—Co-operation of Assistant At- torney General O. L. Smith in the sec- ond trial of Arthur Rich, wealthy Battle Creek youth, for - attacking Miss Louise King was assured yester- day by Prosecutor C. C. Cortright's announcement he would welcome State assistance. Cortright, who directed the prose- cution of Rich at the trial here two weeks ago that resulted in a dead- locked jury, had previously opposed State asistance. Smith recently was appointed by Atto-ney Geheral Dougherty as the' State’s representa- tive in the Rich case and to investi- gate the dismissal of five defendants in another court charged with serious offenses after the jury falled to con- Vlt;t“.mch. King, the daughter of the widow of a former Federal district attorney of Washington, Pa., was the principal witness against Rich, whom she charged with attacking and beat- ing ber here last May. RADIO SERVICE We'll Fix Your Set or No lege. 2188 Pa. Ave. N.W. L RADIO EACH DAY BY JOSEPH CALCATERRA. All Rights Roserved. Repro. Prohibited. The Principles Underlying Trans- former Action. Part IV. In transformers used for ordinary power work the primary and secon- dary windings are often wound on op- posite legs of the iron core, as shown in figure 1. In the audio frequency transformers used in radio the two windings are wound one over the other, as shown in yesterday's article. The primary winding is first wourd over the core. Special care s taken to insulate the winding thoroughly from the iron core, o that there wiil be no danger of a direct connection between the core and the winding. The secondary winding is then placed over the primary winding, so that the two form a concentric winding, as shown in figure 2, where the inner white portion represents the core, the black portion the primary winding and the outer white portion the secon- dary winding. As used in audlo frequency circuits, the audio frequency transformer is essentlally a voltage step-up device. In addition to this function it also acts as a choking device to produce the audio frequency ‘“envelope™” from the high frequency variations in the plate cirenit. Since the vacuum tube is a voltage operated device, it is desirable that the voltage variations be as great as possible consistent with distortionless amplification. The greater the voltage in the grid circuit the greater will be the response in the plate circuit. More Turns in Secondary. The relative current and voltage in the secondary winding of a trans- former depend on the ratio of turns in the secondary winding to the number of turns in the primary winding. The voltage of the secondary is to that of the primary as the number of turns in the secondary is to the number of turns in the primary. If, for instance, there are four times as many turns in the secondary winding as there are in the primary winding, the voltage in the secondary winding will be four times the voltage In the primary wind- ng. A high value of Inductance in the primary winding will produce a great difference of potential across the transformer primary terminals. These two, the high voltage across the pri- mary terminals and a high ratio be- tween secondary and primary turns would produce maximum amplification 1f it were not for certain limiting fac- tors. For best results the impedance of the primary winding of the trans- former should be about equal to or slightly greater than the plate to fila- ment impedance of the tube aith which it is to be used, so that this factor is limited by the plate to fila- ment impedance characteristic of the tube. It is not_desirable to produce too great a_stép-up in the audio trans- former, because high ratios, with thelr attendant high grid voltages, cause dlstortion by making the tube operate tnefficlently. It is a generally accepted fact that lower ratio transformers give much clearer and distortionless amplifica- tion than high ratio transformers, and transformers with a ratio as low as two to one have found favor because of that fact. They do not produce high amplification, but they do mive exceptionally good reproduction with an absolute minimum of distortion. In practice good results can be ob. tained with ratios up to five to one, but it is preferable to use transform: ers which have a ratio in the neigh- horhood of 3 0. K.’D BY GOVERNMENT. - New South Wales State Radio Sys- tem to Cost £10,000. The New South Wales state radio aystem, which will include a central broadcast station at Sydney and six relay stations, and is to cost approxi- mately £10,000, has recelved the ap- proval of the government. Sites for these transmitters are now being se- lected. The first relay station will probably be at Newcastle, the United States trade commissioner reports. The ra- dio system is reported to have been created solely for the good of the country, and is not to be used for po- litical purposes, according to the pre- mier. Jewelry Salesman Robbed. CINCINNATI, December 12 (#).— Forced Into an automobile by four men yesterday Walter Decker, a jew- elry salesman, was driven to the out. skirts of the city and robbed of $6,085 and a dlamond pin valued at $200. THE ORIGINAL TUBE-AND THE BEST in Do Foret bover Isolantite Base stops electrical leskage Radio impulses are very fesble. They must be magnified again and again. The tube so magnifie them. The purpose of “low-loss” construction is to conserve every rrtlelo of strength. Perfect insu- jation in the base of the tube is of ng dding volume and uality to radio reproduction. Porcel ain, glass, composition and the other common insulators are porous. If material is porous, it will retain moisture, thus forming a path over which high frequency currents leak. These ordinary in- sulating ma allow from 8 to 50 times the maximum loss possible through olantite (synthetic quartz) insulation. Isolantite tube :— es are uukd solely by De Forest. signal to the tube el oy are | proof and 32.50 ments. Price..... permit delivery of the full energy of the radio DE POREST RADIO COMPANY Jorsay City, N.J. o TUBES _ D. C. O “The Gracious Gift of God” (Continued from Yesterday's Star.) SATURDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1925. crowd that flitted from villa to villa CHAPTER XXVIIL Lady Weymouth. that shone resplendent with its Jewels and its velvet backs at the Casinu opera; or Tode, in pairs, through the quiet lanes that wandered back from —— won't pop up to us. thing to say, you know. While they waited for the maid to wheel up her tray and arrange the service, Joanna proffered Lady Wey- mouth 'a_cigarette. For her own she found, on a table, an exquisite new holder that Kenilworth had sent her the night before. - She had others, set with emeralds or rubies. This one was of bamboo, in which som workman had fixed tiny bit phor jade. “How gorgeou: Betty cried. *“Trust Roddy Kenilworth to search the ends of the earth to sate the whims of his lady loves.” antly mindful of tnat slip of the plural—his lady loves. And, being an Englishwoman, she was never t a l08s to turn her own slips into an I've really some- sorry T said that, my dear,” A car, turning in at the Amette gate and rolling up the road to the | veranda of the villa, reminded Joanna | that Lady Weymouth, Teddy Dor- | minater’ in the morning that she would like to come out for a chat. “Something onal between you and me she had said in her im- pulsive, staccato way.. ‘“You may give me a cup of tea, and a brandy and soda and when we've had a chat show me over the grounds, if you will. I am all excited by what I hear of the preparations you are making for your big affair.” Brandon frowned when Joanna got up from the bench and Insisted that she must go to the house to greet her visitor. “But we were just beginning to get somewhere, weren't we?” he pro- tested. “Were we?" she asked, looking at him, coolly. *“You were telling m- that Yvonne is following the only honest path for a woman to take; that she is going straight to the goal of her desire. I belleve you said that she must see some promise of novelty in stirring John's madness and satis- faction in proving that she could go in where only an angel would be welcome. You had gone su far as 0 advise me that it was time I drop my pretenses and take love as I find it. I didn't know you were particu- larly trying to get anywhere.” Brandon, who had remained on the bench when the girl stood, rose. It there were a' mask to drop his fell for a fleeting moment. He caught Joanna's arm and swung her about until she stood close and looked up into his face. But when he spoke his voice was like the smoothness of the motor in her Daimler car. It purred And it was {nsolent. “I said all of that, and more,” he murmured. “I sald that you were a cheat; an imposter in the order yon have chosen to enter. You are pla ing every night and day of your life with flame, and foollshly think you | aren’t being burned, but vou are The deadllest burning, you know, is the kiss of an invisible fire that goes deep before it pains. You are being scorched by the ridicule of those who know that you only pretend that you of ind! confldent the main roads by the sea. fessed. apenly, to be ever but one was ruietly that she never ster, had telephoned early | wus bLarely 30, but rep nounced that she was danger of being arrested, or fined, o something like that, for having de- liberately lopped off two years from cretion; She pro- she said, gently. “But it i3 just as t the » erge well, perhaps, because it will open up my way. I want to talk to you about the kind of love that Is spoken of in the plural.” Joanna glanced at her sharply. This was a new Lady Wey- mouth. “Or, it may be that it is love that isn’t plural I will begin about,” Lady was. She atedly an- in imminent > B tea to ask her friend, the Golden Girl, if she won't be chummy and generous and let a good chap down—let him down easily, but let him down. He loves you, dear, and he wants you. I've aiways sald that there wasn't a reason in the world why any man oughtn’t to have any woman he wanted—If she’d let him have her. That's gone for my own brother, too, But he wants you for keeps. That's different, fsn't 1t? es, it's different,” Joanna agreed. ““Women are 80 free to be had these days that it's etrange any man would nt one—for keeps. And you think I'm not the kind he ought o have— in_that way?” Lady Betty smiled, and reached for a new cigarette. “My dear, you are so unexpected,” she exclaimed brightly. “One plans a speech, or a sentiment, and you twist it 4nto something that doesn’t sound right at all and hurl it back before it's given. ‘“She was earnest again. “I mean only that it wouldn't be fair to me, to my brother, to our family, and least of all to you, dear girl, If you married Teddy. It would be hell for you, in fact. And, worse than everything else, it would be hell for him. I love my brother. Joanna. He's a good sort. Thro won't you, like a good girl? you know, I've never taken Joanna reminded Lady Betty, and then added: “But I might, most any time. As vou say, he's & good sort. And I like him tremen- dously. He's asked me to marry him, you know, and that's made him fear- fully interesting to me. You must tell e why— She stopped. With her eves she sign: the maid to serve the brandy and soda. Neither woman spoke while the ice was served and the mixture made. Then Joanna asked: Will you tell me why I am not worthy of your brother? He knows me. You don't. You and I are com- mon birds of prey seeking the same game. You hunt In your way, I in mine. Your thrill may be different than mine, but we're women—or, at least, if you are a woman, I'm 8 girl, which is the same thing. It may, or it may not be, that I shall want Lord Teddy. Why not?” “A Dorminster always has wo: en,” the other returned,” and he always puts them aside for a wife The wifg must be clean, and good. Are you both, my _dear? You're modern, you know. You'rs beautiful and lovely, and, I think, honest. But you're all body. I'm all body, too, but I haven't the nerve that you have. You're not ashamed of it.~ A Dorminster must be ashamed of it. It's a Dorminster convention, Surely I won't have to say any more.” “No, you won't!" Joanna agreed. either shall 1. Teddy would rather have his final answer from me than delivered through his sister, I know. And, I fancy, he'll know quite well what a Dorminster wants—and needs. Perhaps he'll get it. Perhaps not. Shall we walk through the grounds? I think you said you'd ltke o see something of the preparations I'm making. While we are about it don’t understand Kenilworth, Michae] and the others, and the contempt they have for one who tries to be dis- creet but is only deceitful. We had got that far. For an instant anger flamed in th gold brown eyes that looked up into his, she trembled, and the tangerine glow came into her cheeks. Then she was calm, again, and inscrutable. “But what futile progress!" she mocked him. “You read me a lesson trom @ book I learned by heart, long 1zo—when I was twenty-seven of the silks. It used to be, you know. that we needed to be told that if we in- vited we would be expected to accept that if we made ourselves into a wel come sign we might as well say ‘come in.” We'velearned all that now. | And we know when to say ‘come in’| and when to say ‘go to tha devil How much further did you think t go2" He still spoke softly; still remind- | ed her of the low hum of the motor in her car. “Far beyond all of that my dear Joanna! Up to the very edge of all your make-heliev Sud denly his manner changed. e | dropped the hand he had held with a tight, nerveless clasp. His smilc | came back to the corners of his| mouth. He spoke airily. “But the moment has fled, hasn't it?" he ex- claimed. “One must not profess love and make Its demands and propose its bargains when tempers are out of tune; should they She regarded him from half-closed lips before she spoke. Then she said: “You are the cheat, you know. Be- cause you hadn’t said anything about lovel = You'd been trying to get| wherever you were starting for with that part of it. Next time, remem- ber. Neither Rody nor Michael were #o clumsy as to forget.” And she turned away and left him Lady Weymouth, a sprightly, ecsta- tic young woman of that English sort which possesses two distinct char- acters, the one that shows and the one that is hidden, often as opposite as the poles, greeted Joanna effu- sively when the girl reached the villa verandas, where the visitor had chosen to wait. Joanna was fond of Teddy Dorminster’s sisteg, but it was a shy fondness that she never quite revealed. Betty Weymouth was dif- ferent, some way, from others of ths There’s a Light- ning Station near you, demand the mp iginal—it stops knocking. DODGE Sedan, writes Mrs. ‘1 am getting 22 miles per gallon with my Dodge . Krebs, 325 Pa. Ave. S.E. she said, “you want me to stop beckoning.” birth certificate. “One must K off at least a vear with eve: she liked to declare, “and I've already got two.” She was desper- | ately unconscious of any atir: her kno baby. I hope you'll choose the place for your seats in my pavilion theater. I'm staging a little play there that I know you'll love.” They spent an hour on the grounds. It was as if they had forgotten their time at the tea table. Lady Betty was ecstatic again, and enthused anew at each foretaste of the enfete thrills prophesied by each preparation made by the workmen on the Amette lawns. At the pillared pavilion she, was sym- pathetic with the mystery Joanna &pread about the plans which were to have their climax there. “I shall have Teddy sit close to me to protect me from whatever deviltry this pagan temple shall unfold,” she ness or worthwhileness 1pon of the earl. her brother, but often sat nd talked with him for an hour « ime. Which ix seldom the. way hetween brothers of the Teddy Dor- minster type and sisters of the Betty Wevmouth kind nna wonld liked to have Lady Weyn ve how fond she was of her, but wa ever afraid Betty Wevmouth would not take 1ch apprec rusl “I am all eagerness to know about pur fete,” the visitor said at once for that is all T he whispered about I's terribly exciting, you know, to be doing something, or about to do som: thing, that is whispered about. I've been trying ever since I came down from London to get some one to drop their voices about me, but they won't I put on a scandalous affair with Mi chael that night you were with us at | the opera, when you presented Mr. Wilmore, but I've never heard an echo You're so fortunate! The night befol you took just a little dash in a car ! forgotten pre with him and whispers were so thick | L. vou could cut them.” “A whisper doesn’t count for though, does it?' ebullient Betty Weymouth. you know. Teddy an awful a the hem no wom the ner lous trail of lifted from jade and black. We mustn't dear, much Joanna asked the | MY “It'S r: it. h say folks talk it right out loud, as a 'just Betty We rule.” —— ‘That's quaint! “Positively quaint. And so wise! I shall not be content now until people are talking out loud.” Joanna. ng for the butler and or- May we have it served in- | side?” Lady Weymouth asked. “Some place where Brandon, whom I saw just | now with Yvonne and Mr. Wilmore | over there on the lawn, or the others Betty exclaimed. l | | Betty went on, after a moment" templation of the smoke that lazily from her lips. “It's about Teddy, i a th ments when he should have the fingers. But he's always is ever approached i n she doesn’t beeckon to. | re he ought to know. | Again she waited to watch t | smoke wr cigarette bamboo ho! {midway between her lips | The brown eves had Her lids were drawn close. til they shaped into two straight lines. | an,” she said, > slipped from her fingers to A maid appeared out of her mity and recoves 1y Betty did not see the h: the retrieved toba make it a skirmish, | she said to the g looked her full in the eyes. ther like a cocktail without the gin in | Come as a wife with a bargain to pro- When there’s really anything to | Pose to her husbu’v:‘d‘: mjstress. no Stap envging Dumersoy| Studehaker threatened. *I shall want him to be very close to you,” Joanna agreed. And Lady Betty looked at her quickly, There was something unwonted in the vdice of the Golden Girl (Copyright. 1925, H. L ontinued in Tomorrow con- curled and vou, dear. T know, and he's nd gar-| _ opped at | said that | b, a | n Gates.) and I'm u- that | Joanna's For Her . . . o was poisea |J | For Him . . . and the table. | vecome. ivors | | | For the Home. A DEPENDABLE RADIO let us demonstrate a radio to you. Every Tues. day, Thurs 1d Satur- day evenings, between 7:30 and 9:30, we demon- strate radios. Stop in at one of these demonstra- tions—talk with a_radio expert, then decide on the set you like. you want me “co. wha I'm dropned in to Terms arranged if desired M. A. Leese Co. 720 11th St. NW. $6,000,000 Spent by Washington Motorists for LIGH 25 t035% MOR&PEP-MORE POWERS! FORD 30 miles on a gallon of Lightning in my Ford Touring—R. B. Hancock, Dentsville, Md. A.C. TNING MOTOR. FUEL Use Lightning and & e t—more power —more speed— quicker starting— smoother motor RESULTS JUSTIFY THIS EXPENDITURE JEWETT In my Jewett Special Six Touring I get 18.36 miles per gallon on Lightning—J. F. McKinley, National Training School for Boys.