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" Burchell’s . . Bouquet Coffee Famous for Forty Years 30c¢ - N. W. Burchell 817- 19 Fourteenth St. 'PERPETUAL BUILDING | ASSOCIATION PAYS 5% Compounded Semi-Annually Assets Over $20,000,000 Surplus $1,000,000 Cor. 11th & E Sts. N.W. JAMES BERRY, President DWARD C. BALTZ, Secretary l Non-acid cxtumtly low- carbon . content, uniform. ny in quality. Grades' !suitable for all motor. re-. quirmenu. othing portant m- fhoun'h lubriutlu . DT PERENT PROM ALL DT ERS Beware of Substitutes. If your J-hr can’t -cp’ly telephone us, and we yl:"‘i you the luhr‘n name mmluc ly located to you. Bayerson Oil Works Columbia 5228 HOIGE PIANDS FOR_ EN FREE TUNING UNDER RENTAL CONTRACT WORCHS 1110 G EST1879 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, The Romantic Prince SYNOPSIS. Count Anthony of Egmont leaves the court of the Duke of Burgundy, after fAinding that his flancee, Lady Cath- arine, does not love him. SECOND INSTALLMENT. HE disappearance of Anthony of Egmont from the court of Bur- gundy was something more than & nine days’ wonder. It was & source of regret to many, of humiliation to the Lady Catharine of Bourbon and of fury to the duke, who accounted himself affronted n his dignity as well as disappointed in his designs. He at once sent messengers to the various provinces composing his state with orders for the arrest of the count wherever found. M. de Blaumont he despatched to old Duke Arnold's eol.}r'. at Nime- guen, whither he thought it most likely that Count Anthony would have gone, for the gurpose of inducing him to re- turn if he were there, or of informing his father of the event if he were not. But neither M. de Blaumont nor any other of the score or s0 of messengers | sent out by the duke could come upon the fugitive and at Nimeguen there was no news of him beyond what was con- tained in a letter to his father borne [ by the page Valburg on his return to Guelders. This letter announced | merely that Count Anthony had left | Brussels on a dpertonll quest and from | which he could not say when he would | return. Some eight months later, Ghent, that prosperous city of weavers, was the scene of his reappearance. There he went to the assistance of & || young merchant named Danvelt, from ihe town of Middleburg, in Walcheren, who had gotten into a street brawl and was in danger of losing his life. Dan- velt and Count Anthony left the city together and journeyed side by side during the day. As night drew near, they found themselves at Flushing, and, when Count Anthony inquired as to the town's best inn, Danvelt said: “No inn for us tonight, sir. We'll lie with my father's good friend, Myn- heer Claessens, who'll make you very welcome for my sake and whose house you'll find a "deal more comfortable than any inn.” Count Anthony yielded without further persuasion. The prospect of being received on terms of equality in a burgher household was not withou allurement. her they rode '.hn short distance to Mynheer Claessen's hguse where new experiences awaited them. . . . Count Anthony's first glimpse of her burnt into his brain a plctm ‘which was to abide there all days. She stood in the doorway of her father’s house to welcome these guests, lwflud of their coming by the noise in the street beyond. “You are soon returned!” she said, as Danvelt greeted her. “But what has hnppenea to you?” g burgher laughed off that anulryuulwvlueuneby bruised nose and swollen mouth and blackened eye, mightily at ease with her, pro- prlenru almost. “I've my adventure, by my faith, and might never have returned but for Master Egmont here.” ‘Thus he presented his companion with a certain hearty patron-ge, 'hkh at another time must have made Coun Anthony wince. At it, howenr. seeing nothing but this (emlc lady, consclous of no presence but her own, he bowed very low over the slim white hand she extended to him. Master Danvelt completed the pres- entation. “This is Johanna, daughter | of Mynheer Claessens. And here i Mynheer Claessens himself.” “To greet our Philip returning from the wars,” came the jovial voice of the burgher, who rolled forward to his daughter’s side. Mynheer Claessens kept a good house and & good table; he had a nice taste in wine, of which there was great trade in Welcheren; and he was well attend- ed by devoted servants. Under no better auspices could Count Anthony have sought initiation to the domestic burgher life in Zealand. side of L The next morning, having risen be- times, he had gone forth in den. There he had found Mistress Johanna all in gray this momhl, from which demure color appeared to gather an increased demunnu.l, “You are early astir, mistress,” was his comment when she had made courteous inquiry touching his repose. “It is our custom. We are industri- ous folk. As industrious as we are peaceful.” “I should be as pained, madame, to restrain your ind "—and he waved a hand toward the tulips upon which he had found it exercised—"as to trou- ble your peace.” She smiled as she answered him: How long will thi energy last- under the strain - of a COUGH and endurance. Aand yet,s 15-min- ute cough spasm willbringhimdown ‘weak —exhausted — unfit. Medical science says that & spasmodic cough is more weak- ening than almost any form of bodily exer- tion It wracks the Merves, serains the ligs- ments and tears at the delicate membranes of the thtoat. In fact, it affects almost every vital organ. Few people realize the serious effects an ordinary <cough may bring. When your body is weakened and your energy ané resistance is re- duced, that's the time when dangerous germs make most headway. digestion. Doctors ia the past 25 years, have prescribed it for coughs “DON’T COUGH YOUR ENERGY AWAY” Pertussin By Rafael Szbatini Gopyright, 1929, by North Amesiean Newspaper Alliance and Metropolitan Newspaper Service. Thfl'. he found Mistress Johanna, all in . . . from which demure color she ap- purvd fo’ gather an increased demureness. “You would not be suffered to do| to join them and bid them in to table, either.” “Oh, I believe you. know how to defend your own.” where Danvelt waited with the impa- You would | tience of the healthy trencherman. Count Anthony during breakfast drew And then came Mynheer Claessens| the conclusion that a match was al- This Sign Always Says— Your Druggist SA | vou. | Philip's & ready settled between Johanna and Danvelt. He was conscious of a little chill at his heart and suddenly was marveling at himself. He was a prince of the house of Guelders, after all, and heir to its throne. If it chilled him v,o discover a burgher's daughter fittingly betrothed to one of her own class the sooner he departed the better for him- self and others. And 8o he spoke of England and de- sired to know when Mynheer could af- ford him a passage. But the weather turned stormy and for a week the gales persisted in the narrow seas and kept Count Anthony in the Claessen home. More than once he spoke of seeking quarters at the inn, But Mpynheer Claessens sturdily op- posed him. ‘Then one day mews of the death of his father reached Philip Danvelt in Flushing and sent him in haste to | Middleburg. ‘The event pointed to consequences which Mynheer Claessens mentioned on the morrow to his daughter. He spoke gently, a note of regret in his voice. “Now that Philip is master of his for- ;:M I shall be losing you soon, Jo- “I don't think I want to leave you, father.” ‘There fell a long silence, and he saw that her eyes were full of trouble. “May I speak frankly, father?” “I should not know you if you spoke | otherwise.” “I am not sure that my happiness lies with Philip.” ‘Not sure?” ~Claessens was lhrtled ut you are promised to him.” “I was no party to the promise, father.” “Nor was Philip. But he's fond of Old Danvelt and I knew what was good for both of you. Your fe tunes united will make you very ricl “Is wealth the only consideration? “The chief consideration, as you'll come to discover. And for the rest, good fellow, good natured, kindly. He'll make you a good hus- band, never doubt it."” “Not if I do not love him, father.” “Love! Love comes with habit, child. ‘Take my word for it.” She shook her head. “I must judge for myselt in this; judge as my heart bids me.” “But what alls Philip?" “Heaven forbid that I should have a fault to find with him.” “Why. then, all's well. A solid lad. Not, perhaps, of the grace and airs of such men as Master Egmont, but of a worth that seldom goes with such out- ward virtues.” “Master Egmont's virtues are not outward only,” she said, and flushed at D. C, FRIDAY, JANUARY 17, 1930. her tongue's too-ready betrayal of her | mind. He frowned. “This stranger isn't the use of your looking eold.ly upon Phlllp? It isn't that . . She made haste to Interrupt him. “No, no. It is only that I like and re- spect Master Egmont. Therefore I will assume nothing unflattering to him. That is all.” Claessens said no more to Johanna just then on the subject of Philip. But that evening after supper, sitting alone with his guest, he returned to the subject of his daughter's coming mar- riage. informing the count that from childhood she had been promised to Danvelt. And Count Anthony per- celved quite clearly the merchant's ob- ject in this confidence. Claessens knew of his guest no more than was to be read in his actions and externals. From these he judged him a man of courts, of noble blood. of & different clay from himself, and he had a strong and well justified prejudice against unions where such disparity existed. So he prayed for the fine weather that should permit his guest's departure. ‘These prayers were answered at last on the morrow, The leaden pall of the heavens broke, the sun shone clear and warm and the wind died down. Claes- sens was able to inform his guest that the sloop which had been waiting to leave port would sail on the next day. Count Anthony thanked Heaven and was downcast. Thereafter he wandered | in the garden with Johanna, a sad | garden, damp and battered by the | Jobless Father Suicide. daughter in Forest City, yesterday in Flower Hospital Many things about Men and Women DB. CALDWELL loved people. He studied the habits of his patients and tried to improve their ways of living. His obser- vations over a long pariod of time convinced him many people were ruining their health by a storm. Next day he sailed for England, and | her world was empty; empty because of | the going of a man of whose existence | 10 days ago she had not been con- | scious. For comfort she clung to the | hope that he would come again, & hope | begotten of his last words. “I leave my horses, by your mherl favor. My Schimmel is a gentle palfrey | that would bear a child in safety. Us: | him freely until I come again, and, if I do not come again, retain him for your own as an earnest of the gratitude I bear you.” “Gratitude?” she echoed, who de- sired almost anything but that of him. “For what are you grateful?” “To you, for more than I could tell,” he sald. “To God, for having known you, Johanna.” While she stood stricken, dumb by that, his lips touched her hand for the first and last time, in all reverence, and he was gone, (To be continued.) careless choice of laxatives. Then he determined to'write a pre- scription which would get at-the cause of constipation and correct it quickly and safely. How successful his efforts were is best shown by the fact that the prescription he wrote back in 1885 has become the world’s most popular laxative! He prescribed. a mixture of herbs and other pure ingredients now known as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, in thousands of cases where bad breath, coated tongue, gas, headaches, biliousness, and lack of appetite, or energy showed him thst the bowels NEW YORK, January 17 (#).—Dud- | ‘ley Struve, who shot himself between -—Robert Woods Bliss, American Am- ‘me eyes after an unsuccessful effort | bassador to Argentina, to find work to support his wife and | Santa Barbara when it sailed from N. C, died | here for New York. B—15 Bliss Sails for U. S. VALPARAISO, Chile, January 17 (). was aboard the He s off ! at Santiago en roufe' to Valparaiso. 47 Years Practice Taught Dr. Caldwell i fhce) of men, women or children were sluggish. It proved spccessful in the most obstinate cases. So men liked it. Old folks liked it because it never gripes. Children liked its pleasant taste. And everybody is pleased with the gentle way it accomplishes its purpose. By 1888, the demand for this laxative was so great that the doctor permitted it to be bottled and sold by drugstores. Today you ean obtsin Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin from any drugstore in the world. Or. W. 8. CxipweeL's SYRUP PEPSIN A Doctors Family. Laxative ; e jfOr LE One Week Onl BEGINS TODAY Pay for One and Take Two BEGINS TODAY Jan. 17th Baby Cough Syrup—: oz Safe and Good + 2 for Q) B¢ Cascara Aromatic—2 oz Reliable Laxative 2 for 2 50 Cod Liver Oil—16 oz. Pure Norwegian 2 for $1'00 Mineral Oil &Agar—16oz 2 for $]-00 Relieves Constipation Throat Gargle—3 o:. Very effective 2 for 25¢ White Oil Liniment—6 oz. For Sore Muscles 2 for 500 of the Same Price Y operating our own wholesale houses and our own laboratory for the manufacture and packaging of medicines and drugs in large quantities, we are able to sell you the highest pos- sible quality at these special prices, @ druggists. 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