THE HONGKONG
TELEGRAPH. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 1932.
A NEW PORTRAIT OF GEORGE WASHINGTON: YOUTHFUL COUNT & MARKSMAN For Sea or Sun Bathing
A fantastic building plant, costing G$259,000,000 is proceed. ing in New York to the order of, J. D. Rockefeller, Junr, Hang- ing gardens in the style of old Babylon will be one of the fan- times.
Princess Taga Kazuko and Princere Teru Shegoko, pic tured in a Tokya park on an exorcise walk.
Misa Anna Ruiz, performer of Marian's role in the Oberam- mergau Passion Plays, who bas unde takon the prosaic post of hau-keeper to a Sussex gentle-
matt.
A National-Socialist demonst
Iration Al Vienna recently, showing the main entrance of the University where students examined everybody who do. aired entrance.
THREE KINDS
of LOVE
CHAPTER XLVIH
by KAY CLEAVER STRAHAN
1 Ann looked timidly BETORS
the
room is the exact spot on the
The Rotohwehr forces do not learn merely the use of arms as this photo shows. The myster- ios of agriculture are only one of the side-linus.
ROWING FAST RESIDENT M BOERNE, TEX
The
BABY MOVE BOERNE x
JARTZER
NEA
Proclaming the John Garner-for-president move as "young, but growing fast," this unique float from Boerne, Texas, drew shoute, of glee during a colourful parade zinged by Democrats at their Stats Convention in San Antonio.
A new portrait of George Washington, the last ona known to have been made of him from life. Its date is 1799, the year of Washington's death, and it was executed in orayon colour by Dr. Elisha C. Dick, a physician who attended Washington during his fast illness and who marked a clock at Mt. Vernon to show the moment of the First President's death. The portrait, executed on the back of a parchment certificate of membership in a Muanie Indge to which both Washington and Dr. Dick belonged,
recently was discovered in Alexandria, Va.
Rosalie occasionally inserted an hearth rag where Grand had stood, all but fatal illness. Fear, how- explanatory phrase: Ann inter-
his hands clumped over the fourth ever, would not force them to evade rupted once or twice; Ceelly asked button on his vest, his round white their duty. Never had their duty several questions; but, (71 the beard moving gently with his been evaded. They were not, now, whole, the three women sat quietly words, his
Carmichael head nodding his evading It. As Mr. and listened while Grand kept right periods. He had said, unmistakably, had pointed out-one must be able at it. standing on the hearth rug while Cissy there on the horsehair to discern where one's real duty and talking on and on and on. And sola pouted and looked sullen, that loy even after he had Imprinted a kiss the dearest desire of his life and Eagles pushed their eaglets from
on Ann brow, and another on the of Rosalie's life had ever been to the nest, but flew beneath them top of Cecily's head (she had see their darlings married to good, with outstretched wings ducked), and had quivered his voice worthy men who loved them and them should they fall.
to catch The home into the words, "God bless you, my whont they loved in Jarlings. God bless you," and had much was true and easy to believe. be near their dnrlings. In fact and So was here. He and Rosalie would gone from the room with Rosalie, But-ging on from there? in spirit, lying beneath them who was trying to weep, Ann aud Rosalie had said that it was should their wings grow weak-
return.
Ic
and
Cecily continued sitting still and pleasanter than an expensive hotel ready to give advice, to help catch anying nothing. Finally Ann said. That it combined the qualities of them should they fall. "Well." It had the effect of having the best hotels and the best private been dropped from a height to homes and was neither. That it
hard place, though it landed in fair was beautifully furnished, with a order.
guaranteed temperature
of 72
Cecily asked "Do you feel as throughout the winter, and ai · LOVE OF LUXURY?
foolish as I feel?"
"Pushed out of the nest," Ann.
They smiled together then, not happily; fearfully, rather, shamefacedly.
"No, but really," Cecily "what do you think, Ann?" "Nothing. I'm stunned.
What do you think?"
jcharming, quaint dining room with
suid wee tables for two, and larger
tables, if one desired them, and This was the choice facing Ellen but each table had a sweet little pink- Rossiter, a "dime-a-dance girl in Ja Broadway dance ball. Ellen had and shaded light on it,
Ceefly had Interrupted some never known luxuries and longed said, where about there, and had re-for them. Larry Horrowgate
marked that it took quantities of whom she loved treated her as I'm flat.money to hay livings in places of playmate, was never serious.
I that sort.
Steven Barclay, rich and middle- "I'm afraid to atir off this Unheedingly, Grand had gone jaged, offered her every happiness sofa. I wouldn't pinch myself for on and on. Perhaps Ann had not money could buy. a dollar."
fattended as well as she should have Ellen made her choice and her "He had the receipt. You made attended. She was tired out and story, "The Dime-a-Dance Girl," him show it to you, Ciss, you were sleepy. For years and years, by Joan Clayton, tells what hap- dreadful."
Grand had said, Rosulle and ho had|pened, It's FIL unforgettable "Yes, and you said, “Let me see gladly, more than gladly, indeed, serial beginning to-morrow. it, before I even had it in my made a honic for
their girls. I hand." She looked at her watch. There had been so much of that-R "It's a quarter past one," she an- so much of the home that he and
nounced, na good news, and added. Rosalie had gladly made for girls Rosale had walted now, patiently, "Barry left at half-past 12." who had loved their home so deep-and
"I couldn't sleep," Ann and ly that they were reticent about money for the livings in May, at long. They had paid the' "Cissy, let's see if we can't find a leaving it. "Timid feet," he had a time when the vacancy had occur fow words and put them together said. And soon he was being atern red, and at n. time when their and talk."
about timid feet and reticence, and darlings' futures had seemed was comparing them with self-planned and securs.
They had reliance, and had seemed to confuse walted. They had not complained. self-reliance with love, and Indies
4
"It would be fun," Cecily Bug gested, "to telephone to the boys. They've had inie to get honic."."
"So late?" said Ann. "Fun!" said Cecily. "But what could we say?" Ann mused. "I mean-what could wo and flirts,
*
con-
who knew their own minds, and, suddenly, had roundly denounced Cecily, so recently scolded from out of whole cloth, coquettes cerning reticence had, horo, spoken right out. “You have paid Presently Ann had noticed that the money for the livings? Paid it Coelly looked odd, and pink, and in May? Did they give you a re-, "I'm not going to any much of pucker faced, though Grand had celpt? May I see it?"
нау over the telephone? Whern could we begin?"
- anything," Cecily dared to get off said only, in so far as Ann hnd Grand had taken the paper from the sofa, though she did not pinch heard, that he and Rosalie wore his old bill folder and had shown He went on to fit, and Ann had read it word for herself. "I'm going to be sort of past middle age. mysterious leat from Rosalle's say, na Ann latened more intently, word with her own eyes, book. I'm feeling too silly for that they feared, nye, almost dread- Mr. Carmichael, his friend, his Bengo. Barry will loathe it Oled another winter in this great,deur friend, his good friend, had fun! But I'll tell him to como oo cold. draughty place, with the advanced the necessary amount. Saturday..."
hardships and insuficiency of fuel, "Six thousand dollars!" Cocily
“Yes,” said Ann, and stood. 'think I'll just toll. Phil-"
Cecily had gone.
"I He feared for Rosalie's health. had gasped. "But why should he..... |Rosalio feared for his health-a why would he land such a lot of
recurrence of last winter's serious, (money?"
Nine years old, and an Italian count. Ricardo Malvasia Dolla Serra also is one of the world's best marksmon. He's pictured at the Italian pigeon shoot at San Remo, where he dafontad more than 200 older contestants from many countries and won a $1,200 cash prize.
thing."
"Yes," said Ann. "I feel like laughing, too. Only-I don't know, I'm almost afraid to think of how happy Phil and I are going to be. Now that it is right here, it is al- most too big to look at. I wonder how we'll stand being so happy, all the time, and still stay sensible." "Angel," Cecily condescended. "Don't you feel that
way,
* Friendship. Kindness. Solicitude for his friends' health. Generosity. The Golden Rule. Any number of FIRsons. Grand added, however, Cissy?" with a sort of light pride, that hei "No. I don't suppose we'll be so had insisted upon Mr. Carinichael's very happy-much of the time. and the When two people have managed as taking the mansion grounds-the entire estate, in fact much misery as Barry and I have as a pledge for the amount he managed before we are married-I had advanced.
suppose we'll keep on with it, more Rosalie had said, "Merely or less. Less--maybe," pledge. Not a mortgage nor-um -anything disagreenbie of that sort. A pledge. You know, dears, you understand?"
The dears either knew and understood or pretended that they did so.
No."
"I know," said Ann. "I'um," said Cecily.
"You'd rather be unhappy with Barry," said Ann, "than happy with anyone else."
"I hope I'm not such an idiot.
Ann had thought, "All the time "But if you don't expect to 'lo --I wonder for how long-they happy, what are you marrying him have hated it just as Cissy and I for?"
have hated it. That is funny. Ori
"Not for anything. Just
be-
is it funny? Odd that Cisay cause he is Barry," doesn't Inugh. I must not laugh. "l'am," said Ann.
It would be rude to laugh, I'll wait "The Hills," said Ann. "are such
to laugh." Ann had said, "Yes, good people, Cissy." Grand," and, "Surely," and, "Of, "I know." course." to his plan concerning Mary-Frances,
Ann nodded to herself. "Just the same, I'll be glad to have Mary- She would, he presumed, make Frances going to a differet school. her home with Philip and Ann. He We'll live on the west side, near did insist, however, he must insist Phil's office. I don't mean
that that, as often as once a week, at, Ermintrude isn't a nice little girl. least, Mary-Frances should come to She is a very nice little girl, him and to Rosalie and present to, but...” them, as Aun and Cecily had al- Someone was walking rapidly up ways presented, her girlish prob-jthe path. les (if any existed), her youthful Ann said, "Listen, There's hopes, her maiden aspirations. Barry." Phil had farther to come.
"And now, my darlings, my little and Phil was always late. girls-always girls to me, though Coelly said, "Yes," and jumped Boon to be women-" And then the to her. feet, and shook, her cont kisses, and the blessings, and Co-straight, and was gone. elly and Ann had been left alone, Ann closed her eyes again add and neither of them could find a rested her head back against the word to say until Ann had dropped [post and waited.
her "Well" down from a high place. Cecily's laughter, muted, came Ceelly returned on tiptoes. Sho to her cars. Odd, rather, to begin looked dog-guilty and as radiant as right off with laughing, as if some- a sunrise. "Barry's coming," she thing funny had happened the first anid. "I couldn't stop him, I tried instant. Ceclly's voice came, with to, angol, but I couldn't." He won't laughter in it. drive in. I told him to park out- "Ann," she called softly, “Ann. aldo the grounds and walk up. Here's Phil." I'll see him only a minute."
Ann said. "But, Clasy, you shouldn't havo," and went to the telephone.
"Phil's coming," Ann said, a fow minutes later. "I couldn't stop
J
(The End),
COMING SHORTLY
·TO THE QUEEN'S.
him. But I told him to park out- || MKHITY:SEQUEL TO "BEAU GEITE side the grounds and walk up."
*
Cecily and Ann ant waiting on
the porch. It was cold out there, so they huddled together. Co- cily giggled a little, all to herself in the darkness.
"What?" Ann naked. "Nothing," said Cocily. "Every-
**
RALPH FORKES ÜLDHITTA YOUNG
THEME RICH LISTEN VAIL 1900 OFFERS
ID
RADIO
PICTURE
Colours.
There's ou
you' like beel-either alone, two colour
-003
bination, or Fancy strips deelama.
Where there's pleasura and laleure there need be colour and comfort. Revelling in water or idling on beach, your bathing suit has to be` an unwrinkled fit. Nothing to sparo, but no tightness elthor- resiliance in tho knit which yields to move- mont. without strain or unsightly displace- mont. That's why you'll like those 1932 sca suits. Wool doubly knit-ro in forcod
scam)~~~ wandarful clasicity -wear like twoods.
MACKINTOSH'S LTD
SALE
NOW ON
LADIES'
RAIN COATS
SPECIAL BARGAIN
$9.75
COTTON
VESTS
$1.50 to $1.25
GIRLS' RAINCOATS
NEW
Less 20%
JUST UNPACKED BATHING SUITS
IN THIS SEASON'S NEW STYLES.
ALL
NEW
STRAW HATS Less 20%
ELITE STYLES
A.P.C, BUILDING
PHONE 22432.
For the Best
LOCAL VIEWS
and
PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHS
Go To
MEE CHEUNG
Studio, Ice House St.
Branch 7. Beaconsfield Arcade.
WHITEAWAYS.
NEW
DRESS
VOILES
THE "BUNTY"
A English made voile of fast dye in a beautiful range of designs and colourings.
36 in Wide.
Revised Price
$1.25 yard.
WHITEAWAY, LAIDLAW & CO., LTD.
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