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THE EVENING STORY The Turquoise Jar. CAREW was waiting for Holli: LI I her husband. Come to| think of it, she had always| waited a good deal for Hollis at various times and in divers places, for he never hurried even to keep an appointment. Time, his own sang as she undid string and paper. A gleam of blue and gold. The tur- quoise jar! “Oh, Hollis! Oh, you | dear!” she breathed. He grinned. “Now, don't talk until we get out of this traffic.” She sat holding the gift, with a bright look of joy upon her face. At that moment the pretty sales. time he .wuifn.fi.‘ was the one thing | ¢i11 was reflecting upon the sale she uld command as he|hadq just made. The fine-looking, el 1es he inconvenienced | qorly’ man was looking for his wife, venienced Ellen at| she saw, and she had come to his aid for their grand-| Incicentally, she had called his atten. staving with | tion to the turquoise jar, suggesting nts enjoved a|that he buy it. “Isn't it her birthday & cough, and | or—or something®” “It’s our wedding —twenty-eighth.” he with William but | acting as if_he lz'mcnfli\rod nhrenr&':'r:‘é and while she was| first time. So he bought the jar. The . he would want his | salesgir], smiling, gazed at her modest | solitaire and wondered if Jim would 0 be home by 4, Ellen | ever forget one of their anniversaries, the edge of her|even the twenty-eighth. She was sure of the store|he wouldn't, but, if he did, she hoped there would be some one like herself to remind him THE END. (Copyright, 1028.) - Paris Speeds Parcels. Packages are now delivered from Paris, France, to San Francisco, Calif., in eight davs by means of ch heal. | fast liners and mail planes. n made up | “ The straight and narro a favorite thorough: FREEIRALBOX OF FAMOUS PYRAMID FOR \\'l‘l such “z: HEMORRHOIDS 3 of bive and xold| It you, have Plle, 55wl @ady send you S free these marvelous little su) e approached. be marveloss lite sup- itories for their 10 passed | mone—fast y0ur name and adires. s nobody the m \! not an easy they 1} glancing her. The n all the money t a few coins. venir of her trip and , Hollis would not | door was | indeed they rs were won- beggar bowls n brass inset . Once Hollis Bad given he «mnand| PYRAMIDERSE told her that her eyes were as blue | ST ———— That was during their | P! " it ever since turquoise had precions meaning for her. She took up a small jar, examining it and ] igh her glasses. It was | How odd!_She had | her purse She felta | please.” she saidA‘} salesgirl wrapped Elien laid down her | c The salesgirl | glanced from them to the sweet, gen. the little middle-aged lady. is §9,” she explained. | e—ccliars! Oh?” | her are all hand made, you The brass is genuine. S0 is the turquoise. It comes out of the mines there——" She unwrapped the | Jar. showed the label to Ellen, showed ber the labels of other pieces. There was no mistake. "Huw stupid of me! I—1I am atraid glasses were at fault,” Ellen mur- | Rt Eather helplessly. She gath- | ered up the coins, stuffed them into | ber bag with a trembling hand. “I| am sorry to have made you so much | trouble—for nothing.” she said as she | turred away o the restroom she sought a far | came to her eyes. She | seed, ashamed. She had | jar—like everything. But | of course even if she had had $9, that | was 100 much to pay for a mero trifle | = FLUSH OUT KIDNEYS | 'rh»n was a step. It was the sales- | Drink Lots of Good Water Ali| 1 hlrk!u: out a small, snuvl\ hand- | Ferchict. ~You dropped it.” she said. Day, Also Take Salts Occasionally }:u»n nked her. 1am sorry about H When your kidneys hurt and| $3.50 Philadelphia $3.25 Chester $3.00 Wilmington AND RETURN SUNDAYS January 15, 29 Special Train Legvee Washington (Taion Station), 730 am ington, 10:05 a. Tm Philadeiphia, e ltl\'n Phflldfl hia fi p.m F p.m. Chhll 0 D Wiimingion. B 25 o " s Similar I'x:-urnnm February 12, arch 11, April 2B the she added. “I1 am sorry. | 0. 71 ‘wanted you to have it, for 1 aw you could appreciate it,” smiled | the girl . one. len studied a great paint-| lr.:lrj: Y .I;:lv,d before her. It was a || your back feels sore don't get| copy famous seascape. Presently || scared and proceed to load your| It faded 2 quite another picture ap- stomach with a lot of drugs tha peared < place. And mow Ellen || excite the kidneys. Keep your kid-| Baw the village where she had been || nevs clean like you keep your born. sne the old cottage and the> bowely clean, by flushing them yard with its bollyhocks, where she || With a mild, harmless salts which : evenings for Hollis, || 7€lps to remove the body's waste ¥ the street toward the || and stimulates them to their nor- 3 riwaye came so | | mal activity. The function of the ved her fondly || Kidnevs is to filter the blood. In o 2 difference. || 24 hours they wtrain from it 500 had pushed | s of acid and waste, 8o we nd"of his life ily understand the vital sweetheart with | nee of keeping the kidneys but his | Drink lots of good water—you e o op. - Hollis was ||| can’t drink too much: alko get from Jog ediep. Min was || any pharmactst about four ounces T Jook in his keen, || 7f Jad Salts; take a tablespoon in N || a k".mn lyf‘-rm'pr before breakfast ' g i || each morning for ew This famous malts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been | i for years to help clean and slate clogged kidneys; also to neutralize the acids in the system %0 they are no longer a source of tion, thus often relieving er weakness, 4 Ealts i inexpensive: cannot delightful efferves. drink, which and w this?" He! Something for | 4. You never get o1t n out, nodding to the who looked after them with The car was waiting; well er parcel button, and | 1o lite, But r Kidneys he clapped | Try thix; also i| keep up the water drinking, and no doubt you will wonder what be- put came of your kidney trouble and | in her lap, “'Bome | Her heart | fairly taste the Cream MII.D and mellow—richest in creamy flavor, that’s Nestlé’s. Made by the famous blend perfected by Swiss experts, Nestlé’s is a delicious confection — a nourish- ing, sustaining food. In 5 and 10 cent bars, plain and also with crisp toasted almonds. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, PRUSSIA HITS AMERICAN UNIVERSITY DEGREES Titles Earned Here Must Be Desig- nated as Such if Graduates Desire to Use Them. Correspondence of the Associated Press. BERLIN. — College graduates who earned their Ph. D. at an American university must, if they wish to use their title in Prussia, either call them- selves “Dr. Phil, in U. 8. A.” or obtain a speclal permission from the Pr sian ministry of education recogniz. ing the foreign title. This was re- decided by the Berlin courts. aw prescribes also all Prussian cltizens who obtained a degree outside Prussia must obtaln a special permit to use the title. A graduate of an American univer- sity had fafled to obtain the permis. sion and was therefore haled into court. Fortunately, however, he could prove that he had always signed him- self as “Dr. Phil. in U. 8. A.” The court decided that, so long as the for- eign origin was clearly indicated, there “Ivnxs no legal objection to using the title. THURSDAY, BOXING ON NEW PLANE. Berlin Believes Tunney May Give Glove Diplomatic Status. Correspondence of the Associated Press. BERLIN.—nited States diplomacy will be invincible, once 'Gene Tunney has realized his ambition of becoming a diplomat, in the opinion of the Ber- lin_ Boersencourier. JANUARY 12, 1928. “It s not at all impossible that Tun- ’ mon saying that diplomacy works as to forget the fists within Tunney's ney will some day see his wish ful- | With kid gloves, nobody will be so hold | gloves.” filled,” writes the editor, “and will he allowed to represent his country in evening dress instead of, as hereto- fore, In trunks. “The Monroe doctrine will then he truly inviolable, and In negotiations with the foreign offices of other na- | tions the United States will always | be able without dificnlty to gain its demands. For, although it is a com- as A butcher's dog in Newton-Stewart, Scotland, takes cash to the bank, de- livers meat to customers, buys matches for his master and carvies hones to customers’ dogs, never having made a | mistake in any of his errand. 523 11th St. N.W. Complete Stock of Columbia Records Get your copy of the biggest hit of the season “TWO BLACK CROWS” By Moran and Mack of Radio Fame Harry C. Grove, Inc. 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This bank welcomes the accounts of young men and women. 2% DPaid on Checking and 3% on Savings Accounts Company OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Sou est Corner I5th and H “'rents North-lWest EDWARD J. STELLWAGEN President ”.‘mi o7 ?vn\,.,«‘;fi,% ELECTRICAL PRYLESS TWO BLACK CROWS Part 6 (Mack) MORAN I MACK ll‘k‘fi D mum « A VIVA 'TONAL RECORDING TED LEWIS and His Band Is Everybody Happy Now? Y (from “Artists a1 Models") m DowntheOld Church Aisle [ D oz Trats | The Memphis Blues Beale Street Blues Fozr The New St. Louis Blues | My Mamma’s in Town | o7 Foz Trols | LEO REISMAN and His Orchestra What'll You Do? There’s One Little Girl Who Loves Me Ipsne TIMI 5.C. 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