Evening Star Newspaper, December 13, 1925, Page 84

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“The Gracious Gift of God” - By H. L. (Continued from Yesterday’s XXIX. Memories Again. | Weymouth left | only Roddy | It fts the visit of Lady impress upon nilworth _sand Dorminster | nsed it. Neither of them knew of | wppead to the Golden Girl by the | them, but both, in | of her, werc | but insistent Toln his w 1 it. too. but observation issed, Yvonne had and closer to herself Yvonne was deliberate, in her fascination of ect whose name had secome known around the ipparent to all that gay vorships, lik ring n und i might have v cult ar at ated to her. i andon had Lady W th who hed ecall it had heen prom. th i, always Coutantdecided 1o would be a crash. d was on its lea here Golden G d been tixed by ildering revel, th to_vanish. What she bad bullt around her | ttered. So it seemed, and 10 watched concluded. Ted- | minster was trankly worried. | rth, with the calmness of t reflections, b »und him more constantly cectied to As always the whether at the « | plani Perh the s Marth: N -thi e couldn’ na fir |love of the world uzh the Wwith re d_feverish act their finishin there domes ¢ The night of hand. m and n cans somethir wosphere,” Joann the Mones und pri of some sc observe who live »uld have spoken of the haze r to one of the natives, but absorption of the imposir reshaping of the Amet ¢ 1 - embr late, 1sion nd her > day of wdy her, and dre were silences between ther times he detuchd, mood lay, Jo. knews. the fwds with a serious hurt T tir velks S DISPOSES OF OIL LAMPS, INSTALLS ELECTRICITY | Lord Lonsdale. Sportsman of Mut- | ton-Chop Whiskers Fame. Sur- prises Friends. ed Press, December 12.—T mous sportsman, ¥ to mutton-chop whisk b hat, old-fashioned rockety couches and other institutions duys. has astonished his ind neighbors by ouncing wther Castle at Penrith here- | ted by electricity. the led electric hroughout the castle, where the peer nakes his home, surrounded by fields | dense forests, His whole cu\ale‘ aprises 150,000 adr ! t this departu: rom conservat- i« to o no further, Lord Lons- | creed. The change has bout, he sa merely to i please Lady Lonsdule, who persuaded bim to try “this new-fangled idea” | Just to see what it is worth. | S | PARIS PETIT DEJEUNER | RAPIDLY LOSING FAVOR| Life Seem | yeen brough Demands of Business Likely to Cause “Little Break- fast” to Disappear. i a Press. e December 12.—The petit | “little breakfast,” which has long been the traditional first meal of the day in Paris, seems joomed. Its disappearance will nr(v\me: no lamentation among those non-} p"rench visitors who have experienced | the difficnity of obtaining a sufficlent | i | | By tho As: PARTS, dejeuner or eal in the morning as a start for a Bard day's sightseeing. 2 v is superseding divided day is business and | mdustry and is proving more and | Nore popular with hoth employes and | mployers. Time was when almost | .very shop and business house dis- | played a sign showing that it closed | romi mon till 2 o'clock, but such signs | hecome rare. YWork from 9 or 10 | o'clock. with a short-interval for | ght lunch, is becoming the gen-| File. A roil and a cup of coffee. typica] French breakfast. is found alv o suffiefxat preliminary to such | been @ calendar of notable | that |cle of men had {new devotee of the beautiful | sorceries. {momer 1% > v, Tl UNDAY STAI WASHINGTON, D. (., DECEMBER 13, 1925 > 9 U B3 -PART —— “You explained words, when you London that matters same as eve ou'd got on hadn't with inees wither. When she went back to him John said, with the blunt suddenness that echoed a determined resol “There's something 1 must you, Jo. IUs heen trying to come out for davs now, and I know you've been it. I've Dbeen rather a quite fully, came down to 1 and a o brain the short skir nd . good-time the kind of a wife for the ereator of a beautitul thing fo ture generations to marvel at. tell me all over azain?” He knew she was mocking \d he realized he was helple: thousand things hung on his lip her ealm scrutiny of him umbled reached to him & “W ther a coward, John!™ Tt was said, quietly, softly, but there | was something deadly in the manne {of it. He flushed, but went stublornly |on “Yes, rather “It’s to be about Yvoune, you know —~Yvonne and me. Again that quiet Tell me. John, ¥ me? is time she was looking | He could not evade those brown eye |that were darkened by the purple hize in the air, and whose customiry seemigd (o have cooled into a noit While he shifted | she drove in her challense coward Iways, love vou dom Knc how to love. { my own money, and mystery | said. “It nd the threat that is hidden in it | much to do. ut I N want y somewhere, has never appalled nmie so | dance with me first that night. much as your w5 and the g then we shall hav both forg deur of the thing you su day fng in doing. That has n She GATES he solt are interruption you going to over it “Meanwh all o along into the find Yvonne in the re Jing 1o have one of minster's horses saddle over for tea with Loddy at his house. She gave 1 up at him The marvel much of me for him. The Prince terested alwa of Mon:c s in topics and prope are of human merit, had hon him with a command audience and had presented him to that distin gulshed group of scholars and scien tists, and worthy men of other pro fesstons, who gather around him from many parts of the world. It is their tribute to the prince who is dead. the father of the present ruler of the little principality. These savants ted the young American with enthusiasm They complimented him upon the dar- ing of his projected monument to the femininity of the Inspiration for deeds of valor that soldiers perform on the battlefield. They were Intevested in the spectacular rise of the young student. He was asked to deliver an address, and did, with triumph to him- self. Just this day. Joanna knew, one of these commands into the coveted cir vhose names were great. canceled; not abruptly, or offensively, but cunceled, nevertheiess. It could only be interpreted us a re tminder that even a great purpose and i high ambition could not withstand 4 too flagrant violation of certain standards, John had become too much of u frequenter of the roulet rooms. cre was too great an interest in polnting him out as the Yvonne Coutant, und one who would b to sacrifice deeply at the altars o The distinguished young visitor from America had become one of the bevy of moths, even if a bril- liant one, and those who distribute honors are sometimes conservative. The girl who walked through the Amette grounds with him would have liked to comfort him, but he would give her no opportunity. While they stood on the Trianon steps and| watched th fon of hug of blosso s, rhododendro mimosa being brought from thelr Mone: dens, Joanna re- marke Fon haven't complimented me upon 1l of this. Doesn't it remind you, somehow, of the evenings we spent g the time when we would be house that nore than my | | at him ored fiver lazy nervou Don't T love y 1 hier hand and s You will not b now until the fet so near and I ha suce e him until he d watched been able to build, together, uld huve cost pavilion over there It id. mor in reminiscent was nding irt from him, and spoke voie: | : hought. A frown came v casual t his forehe e od memories to soit of thing She looked o sen wonder- | ment. If t i she conces t | When she saw none of the workmen | nor attendants were near, she | crumpled outo the lawn and lay face buried in the grass. memory we once recollection t of that ho every one of someway, so it will stand much—eve: into in one i sur owr t count i is to be the T can't und could Le buil . hous I heyond cut off the view of the she turned toward the had not gone far when she stof She stood for a moment looking 4 her. When she saw that noné o workmen nor attendants she crumpled onto the fice buried i ders shaking conv (Copyright. 19 (Continued in money aved some You marry me Jo. You see Yvonne stopped him instantly wdid:” It quite complimenting him amph within his ed over t pres - vou put | our a of it I've put that | ken it from | e built, and you know the other , and that this will | te and crumbled in the morn st. 1 expect nothing more— “Lave. Joh what wis you Into these thi as upon some, profess d his han for a momen: s splendid. at e You see I'v think my dear the 1 would b her s then in her own. “Tk repeated. “Now coward no lon | a tunny mina, - deso! s silent 1 g She 1 e to give an order to the Ame: who supervised the sorti oms which were to shed for a night & then | Babies Drip With Money. like shall edish mothers here's more » dec gardene! of the bl perfumes re. red.| wealth in the fut World-Wide Demand Graham Brothers progress in the export field isno less astonishing than their continued advance in the domes- tic market. Graham Brothers Trucks were first shipped abroad in volume in 1922. This year’s exports will exceed those of 1922 by fully 1300 per cent! American business men, seeking de- pendable transportation at low cost, found it in Graham Brothers Trucks. Foreign merchants everywhere have been quick to follow the lead of the thoughtful thousands here at home. 1-Ton Chassis, $1,060; 1';-Ton Chassis, $1,345, Delivered Semmes Motor Company Raphael Semmes, President 619-621 G St. N.W. Main 6660 GRAHAM BROTHERS TRUCKS SOLD BY DODGE BROTHERS DEALERS EVERYWHERE without were quite the I was just the same Jazz girl Kenilworth stables, ; place money ir| | the baby’s first bath to guarantee its from but 1 ot Not great rofu- Why him, miled ing ou to By t to- isap- Ther | but hped 1bot ¢ the | houl- | ir { | enters 1 jfr needed flourish. it have IRISTS AT 00DS ONSHYLOCK STAWP One Chicago Judge Says Men, Other Avers Women Are_“Gold-diggers.” glass wh through By Consolidated Prese CHICAGO, Dece 13— Whether man or whether woman 15 the natu Al or_deliberate gold-digger in the | feld of marriage stirring ques | tion which at the moment Las two of Chicago's Teading divorce court ju- | rists at odds | Both are convinced that ging and mar arve intertwined | in the present-day arrangement of things. They just differ on whether | the husband or the wife is the digger. Judge ber gold-dig- | Lewis, the first | of the veter puts the Shy Jock stamp on’ the woman. Child- | less wives who come to his court for| divorce are being denied alimon: s| a result of the judge’s decided views Sabbath Scores Men. Joseph Sabbath, the udie, with a record of 13,000 divorce Cases heard in“his court, now | says it’s the man who has one eva on the financial advantages when he mony of Judge other veteran ge is the man| together and prop- | Judge Lewis. both cease, in he ide: and wife sh agate the says “When they separate that regard, to be any benefit to the | community. It's inhuman to ask a man to g imony to a wife who can earn living, when doing so de nies him the chance to re-establish home and support a family. “Childless, divorce-seeking able to force alimony m their mates, eith alimony-paying husb: in another marriage, marry, the joy of t Soulless, heartless, egotists, the give nothing and demand everything | Judge Sabbath takes different | wives sessments deny these | happiness should th ving childre nds a Women Marry for Love. marry, the for love,” men marry e thinking of At least the m more numerous he de in mar financial sculine | t > feminine ven ho 4 ¥ when she that the womar capacity thro should have supps sband even if divc it support from their divorced ess unable to Which of the t ably remain a m VIOLET RAYS FOR SNAKES Tropical Reptiles Seem to Thrive Under Treatment. ™ LONDON, November 22 (E es is the o is rig Som reptiles were un to stand the of London wi even when | their cages were superheated, and so | many died during fogs that au- | ties concluded that it licht the was Ride in the Chrysler Four and sense for yourself the satisfaction of its brilliant performance. Never before has such outstanding performance been blended with such comfort and beauty of appearance. Over the roughest spots you will en- joy a roadability that you wouldgoa CHRYSLER SIX = $1305 1445 1635 1605 1705 1865 1005 2005 All prices {. o. b. Detroic, subject 1o ‘curvent Federal excise tax. H. B. 1612 You St. as well as heat that the r(-mnm"$4,800 A YEAR IN “TIPS.” Therefore been ar and have cem to be licking up the violet | Women Branch Salesroom—Connecticut Ave. and Q St as none of the better class receives a fixed wage? L'Opinion says it b pens by chance to be in a position 1a state that at least one women's h | dresser (and it his name * kene” and tells where he works) ceives more th; 0,000 Associated Press ) This represents, at a I change, more than $1.800 a 3 Sugene” doubtless hopes that income tax authorities do not 1. ’Opinion they were to live an irtificial sunlight lmps | Paris Women's Hairdresser in Cap- anged ’ln "xlnt;“rn:ju\lr | italistic Class. Hows violet rays to | been instulled. So been satisfactory. T glves [ s dence of the , December 13.—\What ecan a hair dresser in Paris make m‘ rath Correspos PAI » read tips? O what can he make he NEW MARMON A o Watch this New Marmon when it comes past, —1It's a Great Automobile.” T’S a Great Automobile because the best of them, big and little, maintain a whole- some respect for it. When a Marmon radiator looms up in any driver’s rear view mirror, his instant impulse is to “lay over.” T. V. T. Motors Corporation 1028 Connecticut Ave. Main 7767 long way to duplicate. When you drive you will steer and handle the car with a new and delightful ease and security. We are eager to give you the Chry- sler Four demonstration that will re- vise all your previous ideas of per- formance in a car at this price. CHRYSLER FOUR Touring Cor Club Goepe Coach o4 Seden 1095 Chreler kydramiic fowr swhest brakes slight axtre cost. AR prices {. o. b. Detrok, subdact 10 ‘curvess Fodaral excls tax. Bodies by Fisher on all Chrysler enclosad models. All models squipped with f0l balloon tires. B We are pleased to extend the convenience of time-payments. Ask about Chrysler's atrractive pian. Chryslec dealers and superior Chrysler service everywhere. All Chrysler models are protected agatnet thefe by the Fedco patented car numbering system, exclustve with Cheysler, which cannot be counterfeitediand cannot be altered ot re- moved witheut conclusive evidence of rampering. LEARY, JR., & BROS. $ 8os o3 North 4296 CHRYSLER FOUR

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