Evening Star Newspaper, April 2, 1933, Page 75

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GTON, D. C, APRIL 2, 1933 statement, “what I'd like to know is why did you have to buy all this fancy junk? Why couldn’t you have picked sensible Grand Rapids stuff?” A\ Judy.turned to face him. Anger tore at her. How could she ever have imagined that he loved her! “Why didn't I buy Grand Rapids things?” She was surprised at the high sharpness of her voice; She snatched up a miniature ivory elephant marching on the edge of a disk that would hold, with management, the ash of one cigarette. “These museum pieces of your Uncle Mac’s,” she pointed out. “These are the reason we had to get this kind of furniture. You can’t set hand-carved ivory on a table “that you put together yourself and finished oft with two coats of red enamel. We had to get tables that wouldn‘t embarrass the 17 ash And sofas and rugs and lamps to go HEY walked down to the suburb’s one pic- ture house and got in at the middle of & sugary drama. A Mickey Mouse followed, then a newsreel and some advertising slides. The butcher. the baker and the furniture company urged the citizenry to accept the m which they were practically giving away. Fink- elheimer’s new, bigger and better coffee . 'Judy remembered venue. i 3] 52 shife! i « § g5+ § 1l ggafifi dFEeas HHE i : ] i | 5 i e il EVLf i 11 § £ : §d You can tell the country club people Pve gone for a visit to relatives. There are three jars of caviaer in the kitchen cupboard and the power bill should be paid by the 10th. You had better re- member to wear your rubbers when it rains. JUDY. She called a taxi and went across town to her old room at Mrs. Perry's. A STIFP-LEGGED lamb in a framed moito looked down at Judy when she opened her eyes the next morning. She used to call the lamb Pete and talk to him about Jimmy. “ And now she sat up suddenly. “Listen, Pete, men are 10 times weaker than women. Vacil- lating creatures. Moved by the scent of lilacs. Or codfish. Aunt Agy used to say ‘When pov- erty comes in the door love flies out the win- dow.’” The same thing holds with bills. Maybe Aunt Agy was pretty smart when she died an old maid, Pete.” Judy determined to go out to the college to- day to see what luck there might be in getting Nice, she thought, if I'm locked in here. She tried the knob impatiently and it turned with a useless twist. What would Mr. Finkel- heimer think if he found her locked up with his hams? VOICE from among the packing boxes startled her. “Guess somebody forgot to turn the night latch on the other side.” Judy whirled. “Jimmy!"” “Well, see who's here!” He tried to be casual as he came around the boxes, “Is this a co- incidence? Or just one of those things—" “It's carelessness,” said Judy, “if some one forgot to turn the night latch.” She, too, tried to be casual—and had to sit down on a con- venient packing box. “I'm stock room boy,” Jimmy offered in a conversational tone. said Judy, “play nursemaid to the crockery.” Jimmy talked about the popularity of Pinkel- "l_fld you wear your rubbers?” “No,” peries of Thrilling Adventures epared Dishes for Princes; hington’s Salvation Army 3 Lo_dge. work in the kitchen of the Salvation Lodge. He wanted to do more than bake. He wanted the sbility to cook all the fine dishes about which he read. Finally, his father con- sented to his embarking on a career as a chef and supplied funds with which young Smith went to London to the Carlton Hotel as an apprentice chef, “I served three years at 50 picked me up and later, half-frozen and suffer- ing otherwise from the exposure, I was taken on the Franconia.” . ‘We next find Smith back in London, looking for a position as chef. my money,” he says, in the work I had studied so hard at the Carlton to learn. Chef’s places were scarce, for the place and after my references were ex- amined, got the job. I spent two of the happiest years of my life on that yacht. We went to two Cowes regattas in that time and I cooked for and was praised by some of the most prominent nobility of Europe. On one occasion Sir Thomas had for dinner H. R. H. the Prince of Wales, the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire, Admiral Beatty, high lord of the admiraity, and a group of other distinguished guests. The Prince was kind enough to call me from the galley and commend my cooking and service.” T was 1914 and the war clouds were very definite over Burope. Private yachts were being docked for indefinite periods and again Smith found himself “at liberty.” “My grandmother had become very feeble,” ' Continued on Fifteenth Page Jimmy’s chin. (Copyright, 1933.) The Wonders of the Age in 1897 Bath,” “Typewriter’s Flirtation,” “Pennsylvania Limited,” “Empire State Express,” “Sandow— Modern Hercules” and “Nationa] Colors and Actions.” The EdiSon vitascope, for 25 cents, would spread before the audience the world in action. It promised to take the spectator, by picture, New York, the seashore and other parts of world. It would show skirt dancers, hi . racers and express trains going 70 miles hour Thrilling picture of the fire departmen also turned to aluminum fer insulating pure poses. The building industries have also found new uses for the metal in window frames, sills and subframes. ports, for instance, a light stream-line rail IS built almost entirely of aluminum alloys. the Straw .Bflff' ed ‘The automobie industry still ranks as on of the leading outlets for aluminum, its use in alloyed form having extended to the extreme of a 50,000-pound capacity dump truck. The light weight of the metal and its strength, when combined with other metals, has brought about an extensive use of aluminum in the manufacture of automobile frames and chassia, while it has been found successful when used for the manufacture of wuwistons and even cylinder heads. The decreased production of airplanes in the past few years has been offset, so far as ton- nage of aluminum used is concerned, by the construction of the recently commissioned Tl R A W T W S S Embarrassing Question Aluminum has also come into general use as “What is your age, madam?” asked the cler® an insulating material for electric refrigerators, at the polls, bulkheads, hulls and steam systems of ships. “I've seen 30 Summers.” - Railroads and automobile manufacturers have “And how long have you been blind?" #'Q. —

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