Evening Star Newspaper, October 30, 1931, Page 42

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STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY. OCTOBER 30, 1931 i 1 THE EVENING *“You've got a balcony, haven't you? | ing. crept into Cathleen's heart, lumped 1 saw you leaning out.” He's kind of foggy, but maybe hell | - in her throat. There was a right way, “You're coming with me. You can serve pie confident that the crust will be so light and flaky that your will eat it to the last if you use FLAKO Pie Crust. This won. derful product contains all the ingredients for a perfect g-inch double pie crust, all you have to do is add 4 tablespoons of water, roll and bake. Ask your grocer today for FLAKO. Flako Products Corporation New Brunswick, N. J. Endorsed by Good Househeeping REDUCED RATE EXCURSIONS $2.50 Philadelphia $2.50 Chester— $2.25 Wilmington November 1, 18, 290 Leave Washin 740 A, M. or 11 A. M. Return same day Alsc ARMISTICE DAY November 11. Leave Washingidn 7:15 A. M. or 11 A. M, Return same '$3.50 New York Plainfield and Elizabeth November 8 and 22 Special train Jeaves Washington 12 midnight or 7:16 A Re GIVIX AY. NOV. YORK AND NEWARK. 1 fngton 12 ] M. or Returning leave ' Liberty M., Newark 6:15 P. M $4.50 Pittsburgh McKeesport or Braddock November 8 Leave Washington 12:18 Returning leave Pitisburgh Sunday. Other Excursions $10.50 AKRON-CLEVELAND Leave Saturday Nov. 21. 7:50 P. M. Returning leave Sinday night. $16.00 CHICAGO Leave Saturday, Nov. 21, 1:30 P. M. “Returning leave Sunday’ night. 1.50 Ferry. %275 Hancock 200 burs $3.00 Cumberland . M. Nov. 23. Return 16 A St. 6:45 P same day. A 7:30 P. Lea: same day. $8.50 NEW_ YORK WEEK- END . during _ Novem- Every return until 7 P, M, from Jersey ber. City Sunday. $8.50 ATLANTIC CITY ‘WEEK-END Go Friday afternoon or Saturday all day, return limit four days. Saturday i .~ Good_for 3 days. aays and Sundeye. Phone Travel Bureau—District 3300 new 99-B, U. S. Gloritone. Come in Tomorrow and See This Newest Radio Creation Our Motto—Courtesy and Service - MILLER listen, and foolish back se flowers in the ya they don't give you no talk.” After Pritz had gone Cathleen sat on vhat should she ? Marry him Give him the - | responsibility he needed, the anchor he had D Cathiseri’s father is com- iy under Nellsen an: iherefore wishes , but when Neil proposes. she p: Her father has forbidden her Hall has ordered her to be night 12 el once, and prom- ry to find a job. She thi t mti] he has proven himself. When he sccuses her of being in love with some one | ¢ise. she hesitates and mom ture of the youns man named before her. | to wait SIXTEENTH INSTALLMENT. O Kenneth, Cathleen's hesitancy ‘was an admission. “I thought so.” he said and | flung her hand from him. “It’s | Nellsen, And you preaching about my not having a job! Neil Neilsen never did a useful, or even an orna- mental, thing in his life.” “It isn’t Nell,” Cathleen flared. “It i'n't anybody. It's myself. I'd better go now. Please don't bother to come h me. We'll only g> on quarreling.” | ‘Good night,” Kenneth snapped, and | strode off in the a direction opposite to | the one Cathleen was taking. | Nice little room with the blue painted | chair and the field-or-poppies bed- spread. Pritz called to her from the courtyard that her trunk had come. Should he fetch it up? Of course he should. She must unpack, hang up her clothes, set her house in order for the | night. She must run across the street { and get some fruit for the morning. She | was a housewife ncw. | | After a while she would turn the key | { in the door. The world would be shut | | out. She would be alone, in her castle. | | To be alone, to be free—free to work, | free to choose—why, that's all there was to heaven. Unless—— | | _She sat on the edge of the couch. | | Her eyes were dewey. | “If he walked into that door t.h!si | | minute and asked me to marry him, I'd—T'd—fly into his arms.” She put | | he' palms against her cheeks, slipped | them over her eyes to shut out a vision. | What had she said? What did she | mean? A man she did not know! A | man she had seen only once! A man | she would probably never see again. } “I would marry him!” she cried. “I would! I don't care who he is. I—love— | him. Tom—why did you go away, on | the ship?” | Suddenly Cathleen was sobbing, her | head on the fleld of popples. Long, | poignant sobs, half pain, half joy, that welled up from the depths of her soul. | Presently, when the sobs had spent | themselves, 'she heard Pritz clumping up | the sairs. “T'll leave the trunk out here in the hall,” he said, “if you got compa: She ran to the door. “Oh, n sald, and dashed away the trace of tears. “There's no one. Let's put it over under the window. I can pretend it’s & window seat.” “I t'ought I heard you speaking to somebody.” Fritz sald, looking puzzled. “You did,” Cathleen laughed. “I was mxu!g to myself. Telling myself fairy es. “Huh!” Fritz hauled at the trunk. “Better make it up your own fairy tales dan have udders make 1t up for you." | Sensible Fritz. He was a philosopher. | A nice, comforting old philosopher. “I suppose people talk to themselves a lot when they’re alone,”Cathleen said. “T guess maybe they do.” Fritz cen- UPER-HETERODYNE whn Full Range Mu snd Pentode Tubes Everyone Can Now Own a Good Radio NO MONEY DOWN onty S 4 weEk EXCEPTIONAL VALUE—BEAUTIFUL TONE We cannot tell you emphatically enough the full value and quality represented i this Note the beautifully matched Burl Walnut cabinet, with Scrolls and Escutcheons that balance perfectly with the design. Hear its sweet, mellow tones and lifelike reception. see how compact, how permanent, how modern this new U. S. Gloritone really is. You must see it 7th and E Streets N.W. P National 80708071 must have if he was ever to learn that 4 | steady, consclentious work was as much 8 part of success as genius itself? Ke for Kenneth, to him, even thoug! w g as There was no one She leaned toward the window to catch the scent of the heavy-headed heliotrope. If it had been blue, like a pair of eyes into which she had looked! She cupped the flowers in her hand.| were only dumb things. They would not tell her secret. | A want for sympathy, for understand there must be a right way, for her to| ighroad was without | wl could she nl 1| any man. Not | t & notion I have, He may be & I know. Or a married h & family of seven children.” She forced herself to laugh. Some ome was rattling the doorknob, then without Waiting for her to answer, pushed the door open. It was Danny. “What's the joke, Juliet?>” said her brother, stepping into the room, ducking | ead to keep from bumping it. be surprised, darlin’.” Cath- id, lightly, and moved ‘to make him bedide her on the trunk uliet? ; Sa'cand reatment ¥% PILES A — o Ry o~ Precess l-"— watil ol tortwre seases, Your Child in TWO WEEKS How to rid any boy or girl of i sluggishness or constipation and build a big appetite. ‘The trouble with children who will not eat a tongue tl breath, often a ambition—even for play. Hard to get to sleep, hard to wake in the morning. The condition. It gives listless youngsters the appetite and energies of a young animal! They eat! They gain! They keep welll The California Treatment stasis. The symptoms are at’s always coated, bad gaor color, dull eyes that are ilious yellow. No appetite, no is usuzllx ’s an absolute remedy for this conquers Sluggishness It’s not the stomach, but the bowel condition that keeps children from eat- ing. But the trouble is in the lower bowel —the colon. California fig syrup is the only “medicine” needed to stimulate the colon muscles. The very next day, your child is eating better and feeling better. Keep on with the fig syrup a few days and you will see amazing improvement in appetite, color, weight and spirits. Any drugstore has the real California fig syrup, all bottled, with directions. Nature never made a nicer acting or nicer tasting laxative. (It is purely vegetable.) Remember California fig syrup when sickness, a cold or any upset has clogged a child’s bowels. WARNING Even when if's something to give children, vourself. FURN COM 3206 M Street N.W. Look inside, “under the hood,” and some stores will try to substitute. So be sure the bottle says CALIFORNIA Fig Syrup. ITURE PANY “How do you like the spacious roof | come out of it.” The question drove the mist of doubt | from Cathleen's mind. | she said. (To be continued.) oot FAMILY SCRAMBLED Mother, Grandmother and Daugh- ter in Puzzling Relation. OSLO (#)—A 49-year-old woman A here, a great-grandmother, was mar- | ried to a painter, 23 years old. She had a daughter by a previous daughter, now 33, has become & Her daughier, 17, married the father of the n~m’r-olfl k i f Everybody %o figure out relationships. N has the answer. Select Your New WESTINGHOUSE REFRIGERATOR LOW AS s190 R { Desis 7 _Pureh Hopone % MUDDIMAN § 911 G Se. Nat'l 0140-2622 Organized 1888 Iy the conservatory.” “I don't love How did you find me?"” “Got the address from the truckman en you coming home®> Dad ay skin you alive “I am home.” Cathleen nestled her Danny—it's !” Danny rose and circled space of floor, hands thrust pockets. “Love's a lot of blah! You're my sister, and I won't have you head on his shoulder. rattling around like a loose pea. Get great to be—free.” |on your hat and come along home. IT “Must be, old empty-pockets. What | see that dad doesn't bully you.” going to live on? Roots and berries | “Thanks, darlin’.” He was so young, and stuff you find in the village woods?” | so confident, her handsome big brother, | “No. Gotng to get a job." thought Cathleen. “If you're going to | “Cut it, sis. You've carried this far | boss me, Il have to gx'. you out. You enough. Even my goat's beginning to | see, this is where I'm to write my decla- bleat. Why dont you use your head | ration of independence. It's to be a and take on Neil?” regular thriller!” - g You'll have to toss the idea out of the T just—can't BHave you seen the Astounding. Values below $100 in the A nnual Autumn Sale! They form what a real event this I&—and what dented offerings we are making in this remarkable sale. There is no novelty in suites being offered below $100 in price—but there is no parallel for the offering of such values as are repre- sented in these three lots. They are wholly with&ut precedent, but typical of what this sale means in every department, , v Remember, Our Costless l Credit Makes Buying Easy;;'i“_ e — Bed Room Suite | Its every line and detail proclaim its superior quality and contradicts the special price as a measure of its actual worth. Walnut veneer, with center matched burl overlays. Top draw- er and base rails are figured maple. Ef- fective carvings add their touch of deco- ration ovienenos . Two-Piece Living Room Suite Not only most effective in design, and attractive in upholstery, but with quality in every detail. Fine tapestry is the covering; and the cushions are the loose spring type .. o . $89 . .. Dining Room Suite This suite is made with genuine walnut veneer over gumwood; with that rich shaded tone and high gloss finish. A suite that looks the many dollars more than the price and worth . House & Herrmann $99.50 West 0845 “Furniture of Merit” Seventh at Eye

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