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THE EVENING MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1935. Eurasia opened the door and In a sec- | arms. His kisses were flavored delice | “You're looking well, Mr. Howard ond they were surrounded with a|iously with peppermint canes. Then |Chandler Christy-Montgomery Flagg|Jim Carter. came Jane Lee and Dick—and finally | De Ville. How you been?" “No, not married, woe is me. But ob of holiday celebraters— n "“'hg"‘ ke 'L oo |# radiant Zanie Lou. Her facetiousness cleared the air. |still hoping.” Jane , Dick, Zanle Lou, Skeeter—| gugar hesitated when Johnny's | Johnny grinned. ‘The amazing dimple that came out | squared proudly. - speak now, or forever hold his peace.” Johnny! Jim Carter sat Sugar dowx.:. turn came for a kiss. Then she held “Terribly married, Miss Langworthy. | in her right cheek only when she was “Ladies and gentlemen,” he cleared Skeeter was the first In Aunt Patsy's | out her hand. And you?” entirely at peace with the world |his throat importantly. “You see be- STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, She slanted a rougish brown eye at | popped open like a flower, Cart caught‘ fore you the future Mr. and Mrs, his breath at her beauty, and gathered | James Carter Le Masters. June 24 her in his arms. | is the day. If there is one among you His gray uniformed lhuuldersiwho objects to this union, let him | Alms Siolix Scarderry ‘THE END. INSTALLMENT XXX. T WAS the first of September be- fore jane Lee was able to sit up. The first thing to be settled was Sugar’s future, 3 Sugar sat at Jane's feet on a little stool by the lily pond while they talked it over. “You may do just as you like, Patsy Ann.” Jane Lee reached out and took Bber sister’s hand into her lap. “Cart and I can't get married till he's out of Virginia Military Insti- tute.” Sugar’s brow wrinkled thought- tully. “If it’s all right with you, and we can get my credits straightened, T'd like to go to college.” Jane Lee smiled. “That's what I hoped you would say. Have you any choice? The Langworthy women and the Shiplee ‘women, our mother’s people, have al- ways gone to Sweetbriar. It's near V. M. I. I believe you'd love it. You could run down for the foot ball games.” “Oh, that would be wonderful!” Sugar exulted eagerly. “Let's hurry and see what we can do about it!” “I must have my shopper pick up & wardrobe for you in New York,"” Jane Lee planned excitedly. “She knows my taste, and I can describe you to her and send your measure- ments. Her selections are flawless.” Sugar sighed. W “It's too good to be true. will take care of Skeeter?” Jane Lee held out her arms. “His mother—always. Come close to me, baby.’ .Sugar knelt by her chair and put her cheek against the cool, pale one of her sister. “Tell me,” Jane Lee asked, softly. %“can you really forgive me? Oh, my darling, I was so unfair to you.” Sugar pulled away to look gravely into the eyes that she had once thought so cold and sinister. “There is nothing but love in my heart for you, sister. I haven't suf- fered any more than you. Not as But who much. I was a baby and didn’t know any differently. I was never really unhappy at the orphaange.” Jane Lee clutched her to her again, convulsively. “If only you could have been my daughter,” she said with a sob. “Oh, I wonder if theyll ever find Zanie Lou.” It was the next day that the first news came from the runaways. It arrived in a long wire from Scoop. “Dear Mrs. Le Masters: The lost sheep turned up today when Johnny De Ville came-to the Democrat looking for a job in the art department and asked for me. This is-the story. Zanie Lou took the money and she and Johnny eloped to Richmond and were married the next day. Both were afraid to come back or send word be- cause they were sure they would be arrested. The two thousand is gone and I landed a job here for Johnny. Both look well and seem happy and genuinely in love. They will commu- nicate with you on promise of for- giveness. Zanie Lou says she eloped to spite Skip Lanier and Sugar, but had the good fortune to discover she was in love with her husband. Haven't told them the big news about Patsy Ann. Will with your permission. Wire | me what to do. Regards. “SCOOP O'REILLY.” | December 24 came and brought with | it a perfect snowfall that transformed | Lorien into a movie set. Cart and | Patsy Ann were arriving home for the | holidays | They were early and it was a joyful, | broadly grinning Eurasia who held mistletoe over their heads as they | entered the door. The cadet foot| ball captain picked the sweetest lnd} prettiest girl from Sweetbriar up in | his arms and kissed her tenderly. | “Yo' all mus’ come right now an’ | see de Christmas tree,” the old cook said, hustling them toward the big living room. “It de bigges' one yo’ evah set eyes on.” Cart carried Sugar down the hall. | Eollege Date Bureau Provides Students Variety Bpecial Dispatch to The Star. BOSTON, November 11 (N.ANA) ~Blond. brunette or titian, college men can now name their choice for a *“date” and the intrepid undergradu- ate engineers of the Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology can supply de- tailed information about girls, includ- ing name, telephone number, height, weight, whether they smoke or drink, and a few other facts which may guide a student in picking a partner for a social function or some nice little girl who would like to stay at home and listen to the radio. ‘The “date bureau,” supervised by George Levy and Leonard Seder. two undergraduates at M. I. T., is a non- profit institution. There is no charge to either party using the service. Started at Dance. The idea started one night, not long ago, at the intercollegiate dance of the Menorah Societies of various col- leges in greater Boston. Girls attend= ing the dance, many of whom came from Simmons, Wellesley, Radcliffe and Boston Art School, received a printed sheet at the entrance to the dance. Questions asked included “name,” “phone,” “term address,” “do you drink,” “do you smoke” and many others, Armed with these data, the tech students established a budding place for cupid, known as a “date bureau.” The information was codified, first by height, since the two students con- ducting the bureau found that short young men preferred girls of about their own height. The files revealed that brunettes outnumbered blondes and red-heads. It also was indicated that 35 per cent admitted they drank liquor, while an- other 35 per cent said they did not. Others just suited themselves to the | circumstances. The bureau has been in operation | about one week and a dozen students at M. I. T. have used the files to find partners for an evening’s fun. Several amusing angles have popped to the fore:in the first week of the new agency. Already one of the members of the committee guiding the destinies of the bureau has dated a certain miss four times in one week, and a diligent search by other stu- dents for the name and detailed in- formation of this interesting young BERRY PICKER FINDS LOST DOG, GETS $1,000 By the Assoclated Press. SEEKONK, Mass,, November 11.— Walter L. Kelley «f Pawtucket, R. I, came to pick cranberries on a farm bere yesterday and found $1,000. Wh'e he was in the berry bog he ea - a dog, weak, emaciated and suf- fering from exposure, Kelley took it to a veternarian, who % =ognized it as Sox, 2-year-old Bos- ton terrier owned by the wife of Wal- ter E. O’'Hara, p:. 'dent and managing director of the MNarragansett Racing Asso tion. ‘The dog jumped out of an automo- bile near the race track in Pawtycket on October 25. O'Hara offered a reward of $1,000. TREAT A COLD of Girls lady disclosed that her “date bureau record” was missing from the files. | With the week end at hand—which | means fraternity dances, foot ball games and other college functions— the men conducting the “date bureau” expect to be busy meeting the demand for partners. | Many of the girls, in filling out their questionnaires showed that they entered into the spirit of the thing. | In answer to the question, “Do you | dance?” one fair youn gthing an- | swered, “And how!"” Radcliffe girls‘ like men who are tall, dark and hand- some, the bureau found. Good looks were required by the girls in a ma- jority of instances, but the thoughtful | boy also was among those who de- served favor. Sense of humor, good sports, and athletic types of men also | found places in the girls’ fancy. One girl preferred “an old smoothie.” (Copsright. 1935 by the North American Newspaper Alliance. Inc. 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AS IF YOU MEAN IT! Don’t Fool Around with Half-way Measures and . . Invite Serious One of the worst things you can o is “kid around” with a eomlri. The so-called “common cold” tauses more serious sickness and more enforced absence from work than anything else. It's & mistake to treat a cold lightly. A cold calls for a cold treat- ment and not a “cure-all”. A cold calls for internal treatment, for & cold is an internal infection. ., One of the best things you can : take for a cold is Grove’s Laxative . Bromo Quinine. Your own doctor. ; will tell you that. First of all, Bromo Quinine is a | eold tablet, made expressly for the # treatment of colds. % Secondly it is internal medica- ¢ tion and of fourfold effect. § Here's what it does: % [First, it opens the bowels, an ¥ gdvisable step in tresting & cold. | Complications! Second, it checks the infeetion in the system. Third, it relieves the headache and feves T, * Fourth, it tones the system and helps fortify against further attack. Bromo Quinine contains nothing harmful and is safe to take. For more than 40 years it has been the largest selling cold tablet in the world. There must be a reason for its Pflp\lllfi 3 lay safe! The moment a cold threatens, go right to your gist for a package of Bromo Quinine. Start taking the tablets immediately, two every four hours. Prompt action will often see your cold stopped in 24 hours. All dmg stores sell Bromo Quinine tablets. The few pennies’ cost may save you heavy medi Ask for, and insist upon, Grove's Lazative Bromo Quinine. % The GOLDENBERG Co. NA. 5220 o SEVENTH AND Slight Irregulars “Tissue Chiffon" All Silk Hose 29~ Three-thread pure silk hose . . . sheer and clear . . . with tissue inserts in leg of each pair to dis- play their sheer clearness. Wanted colors, Sizes 8'2 to 10'3. Main Floor. Rayon Taffeta SLIPS 59 Guaranteed seams in these bias cut rayon taffeta slips. Lace or trimmed. top. Tearose or embroidery straight Sizes 34 to 44. Main Floor, 59¢c Panne Rayon Satins 39 Lovely fabrics for making drapes. bedspreads. and scarfs—equally Tots’ and Toddlers’ 49¢c Panty Dresses 33 ‘Tub-fast novelty prints in various colors. Cute little styles in sizes 1to 3 end 3 to 6 years. Second Floor. KNITTIES 19 Warm, snug - fitting panties and vests, with lastex cuff. Flesh color. Small, medium and large sizes. Main Floor. Boys’ $4.49 Snow Suits 53.95 belts and fine All wool and water proof. Nave Bizes 5 to 10 brown, maroon and green Full zipper front Bizes 4 to 12 years. Junior Boys® $1.89 “ Fall Suits 5".59 Fancy copduroy button-on with mafching broadcloth blouses years, Main Floor., Main Floor, Sicilian Damask Window DRAPES s 88, 72 Inches Wide to the Pair For regular size windows. Pinch pleated, sateen lined. Rust, green. red, gold or wood- rose. Complete with new pat- ented pins. Goldenberg’s—Third Floor. Sizes 36 to 46. 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Just 50 of these popular soft felt fabric rugs, in broadloom colors of red or Irregulars. Downstairs Store. W;inen’s 79¢ Slip- Bain and flannelette Extra colors and stripes. Flannelette Full-cut, warm, soft and fluffy Gowns, in solid Sizes 16 sizes, 69c. Main Floor. Turkish Towels \ Windsor ncludes: Were 39c and 49¢ 27c Generous size ... 2244 inches . . . ex- tra heavy dou- ble thread, ab- sorbent quali- ty. Attractive colored bor- ders. Seconds. Main Floor. $45 Ten-Piece Bed Outfit s29°° Metal Beds, choice of Wind- sor or center panel style. Soft Cotton Mattresses Feather Pillows 1 Table Lamp o Goldenberg’s—Fourth Floor. 1 Night Table All wool tweeds, plaids and checks, in swagger or belted back models. Smart tailored types with raglan, square cut n sleeves. 11 to New egged-Top Walnut Dresser with hanging mirr Bedroom Suite 557.75 rutbed walnut finish, 1 design. Oak 1interio: wer guides, dustproof throughout. chest on chest, choice of twin or full size poster bed. $ DELIVERS—Balance in convenient payments, plus small &arrying charge. Goldenberg's—Fourth Floor. Women's & Misses’ $13.95 & $16.95 igid = — wool fabrics in !\ plaids and football col- Mors. Fish tail, English Hjor belted models. Silk crepe linings and warm jwool interlinings. Second Floor, Women'’s All-Wool " SPORT SKIRTS $‘|.99 All wool flannels and tweeds with novelty button and pocket trimmings. Others with gores and pleats. Sizes 26 to 32. DELIVERS—Balance in con- venient payments, plus small carrying charge. e