Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 198, Decatur, Adams County, 20 August 1932 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. Bntared at the Decatur, Ind.. Post Office as Second Class Matter. I H. Heller Pres, and Oen. Mgr. A. R Holthouse Sec'y & Bus. Mgr. Oick D. Heller Vice-President Subscription Rates: fllngle copies ... t .02 line week, by carrier ..10 line year, by carrier _... 5.00 One month, by mail 35 Three months, by mail 1.00 Six months, by mail 1.75 i One year, by mail .... 3.00 T ie year, at office 3.00 Prices quoted are within first and second zones Elsewhere *3.50 one year. Advertising Rates made known on Application. National Adver. Representative SCIfEERER. Inc.. 15 East Wacker Drive, Chicago 415 Lexington Avenue. New York Charter Member of The Indiana League of Home Dallies. The Republicans will meet in convention here tonight to fill their county ticket and do a little whistling for the fall campaign. The two men who went up in a ba'loon ten miles will now report what they saw and which to the average person will sound about like explaining the Einstein theory. Cut the weeds. They not only look bad but they are germ spreaders and at this time of hay fever we should all give that much aid to the unfortunate victims of a tcry inconvenient ailment. Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney is a Democratic candidate for congiess in a New York City district. "Sonny” recently inherited a him(bed million do’lars, Bet a quarter he wins. Senator Smoot says a general rales tax will soon be absolutely I necessary and therefore mu s t < >me. whether we like it or not. lie is probab'y right for we seem to have used about every other method but that. Each cool spe’l we hjve now, the winds whistle a little louder and the air feels a little colder. It won't be long until a well-filled coal bin wi I look good to most of us and now is the time when you fill it up at lowest cost. Governor Leslie has given his approval to the salary cut hill and it becomes a law. though the attorney general hold it unconstitutionr.i. It is the opinion of the governor that any error in the tit'e can be corrected in the regular session and that there are or ought to be general cuts in piy of officials. Another term of the Reppert School of Auctioneering is history and another bunch of men have been well prepared in the ground work of a profession that should bring them money and glory. Those who use the knowledge gained during the past three weeks will find they have made a worth while investment. The claim is made that since the eighteenth amendment became effective the habit of drinking has l.rgely increased among women. Time was w hen the women grieved
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for their husbands who imbibed. Now we presume if the statements made are true we shall soon hear of the husband weeping because of erring wives. t Evidently Mr. Hoover and Mr. • Curtis don't agree on platform or ' policies, which certainly makes it a little embarrassing for both of I them. We doubt the advisability I of one running wet and the other * dry, one for enforcement and the i other for the change of the ISth ( 1 amendment. i _ —~ Members of the Democratic committee, both men and women, will meet here next Tuesday evening, to select a nominee for judge of the circuit court. There will be sixty-eight entitled to vote and it is expected that every one will be there in person or by proxy. The contest has been a friendly one and will so continue we are sure, though the importance of the event is not being overlooked. The stock market continues to fluctuate from day to day but there lias been a gradual -.'atse the past two or three weeks. To that the public will give little attention, being more interested in the prices ct farm products and the general improvement in merchandising. The autumn is near, thousands of folks need clothing, shoes and other commodities. There are indications for better business and those who go after it will get it. Senator James Davis, former cabinet member and still familliarly known in Indiana as "Jimmy", has been indicted with six others by the New York federal grand jury for participating in lotteries. That's a serious charge but the public will not believe that the senator I did it for any thing but charity, wronged no one, and would regret to see him punished. However if he can so indu'ge others can and 'he laws, we presume, must be upheld ptrt of the time, somewhere. The governor went fishing and left eight bills unsigned. These it is understood will go the “pocket veto” route. The bunch includes the one which would legalize betting on horse racing and likewise the one known as the “home rule” act. For both of these there was ' much sentiment and they will probably be brought up again at the regular session. The horse race nill has been approved in many other states, including Kentucky and Illinois and the revenue from these laws is usually large and pleasant to lake and since thousands bet on the races any way. there are those who argue the state might as well receive some returns. —o ♦ ♦ I Household Scrapbook -By— ROBERTA LEE • « Loose Matches Loose matches should Ire kept in a covered tin box or glass jar. A strip of sandpaiper can be pasted ir und the outside of the box on which to strike the matches. Velvet Flowers Velvet flowers can be denied by using dry bran. Rub on the soiled parts, then brush off. Repeat it necessary. Canned Foods Do not allow the canned goods to stand in the tins. Remove it before placing in the icebox. a:.t! c ver .n dish to prevent odor from I permeating the icebox. o * TWENTY YEARS - * AGO TODAY 1 From the Daily Democrat File 2 « Miss Agnes Meibers entertains at 6 o'clock dinner for Miss Gandy of Churubusco. Prosecutor R. C. Parrish- weds Miss Ethel Barkley at Winchester. Miss Tillie Meiberu purchases half interest in "Store of Quality'. Geo. Gunsett and D. N. Erwin ■have banner oats er. p-eighteen acres yeilding 1,120 bushels. Miss Mabie Moses of Detroit is a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Daltb Moses. Mrs. P. J. 'Hyland and children are visiting in Winchester. Ferd Litterer is in Richmond transacting business. Misses Ode Fullenkamp and Caroline Dowling leave for Celina to visit the Chris Meyers family. Dr. and Mrs. Pjtterson return from two weeks in Terre Haute. Harry R. Moltz is in Chicago on business.
~ ~T_ L A Preview of Milady’s Fall Millinery * * * * * * What Will Be Worn and Why Seen and Explained at New York Fashion Show as Designers Display Their Latest Creations. , ofA fßr x* — VY" I v > > lMk If ®fiL. Wpy wlnffßbt ... '
The all-importent (to milady) question of what are the new hat styles was answered at the display of Fall and Winter chapeaux at the show of the Retail Millinery Associaion in New York. Here are three of the many charming models shown there. While the turban remains most popular, even these have bseo "d. vised up.” On the left is a charming black
By ALICE DENHOFF NEW YORK. -Pretty but practical. just about spins up the hats that most of us will be sporting this Autumn and Winter, despite all the talk a'<out novelties. Most of us jam a little velvet or felt turban down over our ears, turn up the big fur callirs of our coats and set out to defy ttte elements when the sun of Summer is no more. We reserve the novelties for hats for dressy wear after dark. And according to all predictions. we are going to wear semiformal clothes and hats for smart evening, more than ever this year. Then is the time to go in for such things as the feathered hat and muffs sets, a typical one being of white coq feathers on black velvet, with the muff made entirely of the feathers. Another very lovely evening ensemble along the same lines, consists of a coral velvet turban edged with a border of tiny matching ostrich tips and worn with a muff made entirely of the coral ostrich feathers. But it is with those chic but useful everyday hats that we are most concerned. The usual day hat will mostly be
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By HARRISON CARROLL. Copyright. 1 >32. Kin* Feature* Syndicate. Ine HOLLYWOOD, Cal., Aug. 00.— The so-far profitless search made by Universal for an Indian to play the lead in “Laughing Boy,” brings forth a prQmisJjMuMMx ing by-product. : He is "Reb” | St Russell, a quarrejgm. IS? ter Cherokee, and an all-Am-8 erican football ’’Ww'&Kil star at western University t "'° Y ears at ’°' The newcomer i is taking tests for an impor“Reb” tant role in UniRussel) v ? r , sa >;« . new . serial, The Lost Special,” by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. After he finishes in this picture, the studio expects to develop him into promising star material for westerns It looks like a big year for the Indians. Frank Albertson has the lead in "The Lost Special,” with Ernie Nevers, the former football star from Stanford, in support. With the departure of the Olympic athletes and hundreds of thousands of visitors, go more than five thousand people who got into the studios during the two weeks of the games. During the two weeks’ period, Paramount studios handled almost 800 visitors alone, while United Artists took care of around 700. In normal times, the number of visitors is one tenth of that number. Jimmy Durante is telling this one on the set of "The Phantom President.” It’s about a valet Durante once had. The valet’s wife died and the night after Jimmy caught him out with another woman. He called his servant aside and delicately hinted about the bad taste of the thing “In my grief,” sobbed the valet, "how can I tell what I am doing!" BOULEVARD CHATTER. For those who have missed the gentle "Little Colonel," Henry B. Walthall ha;, started a come back in "Cabin in the Cotton " As a result of his work in the Richard Barthelmess picture. W arner Brothers have cast him for an important role in “Central Park.” a story of New York. Wallace Ford the role
* DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1932.
of felt, with velvet reserved for the more dressy models. The turban is more important than ever and is saved from monotony or standardization by a diversity of treatments. Fly-away backs, pointed "ears” with feather ornaments between, draped “cuff” brims and bows placed in various ways. For lows have bowed themselves into the millinery scheme with great success. This began when Madame Agnes placed velvet bows on the center of the forehead to anchor the new models into place, after the tiptiltes silhouette of the past few seasons. Black velvet toques and berets with forehead bows in contrasting color velvet ribbons will he in general use. for that most important everyday hat. Black with ruby anil coral trimming is a color scheme that has been endorsed by Paris and New York. The sailor hat developer! in velvet will be welcomed by many women, as it is extremely smart. Cloche sailors witli brims dipped over one gye make a more youtlx, fill version of the brimmed bat for Winter wear. Round shallow crowns as well as square ones
slated for Charles Farrell, who was working in another picture when the call came. Among Hollywood’s devoted fans, Mark Truck McCall, named after ' the character Andy Devine played in “The Spirit of Notre Dame.” , Truck is a mongrel pup sent Devine by a fan who %dmired the former football player’s work in the Knute Roekne memorial film. ' The dog follows Andy all over the 1 lot where the actor is playing in "All America” for Universal and lives with him on his houseboat at 1 the beach. He even goes to see the rushes. When Andy is alone on the screen, Truck wags his tail, but if ' any one comes close to <him on the ■ screen, he growls. Marlene Dietrich is wearing her • hair frizzed out like an African fuzzy-wuzzy for some scenes in “The Blonde Venus.” . . Regis Toomey and his wife played host on 1 the pleasure ship, La Playa, over the week-end. It was his birthday. . . . When Cecil B De Mille knocks off on the “Sign of the Cross” set for 1 lunch. Paramount looks like a Ro- ’ man holiday. Saw Stanhope Wheatcroft, who has played more Tuxedo parts than any man in Hollywood, dressed like a Roman senator. . . . Evalyn Knapp and Donald Cook ’ stepping again, at the Frolics. . . - Tom Coakley’s band opens at the • Hotel R - sevelt tonight. . . . Jack _ Gilbert’s wedding present to Virginia Bruce 1 was a Krhnd piano. The new i. '"W ,Mrs. Gilbert is ? M 8n accomplished xW pianist. . DorI othy Wilson, who stepped from be- % •«. . i hind a typewrit- , * F r 10 r'ai’ the i * n “The ■ Age of Consent.” / * ,as ecn an - T , swering tele- $ phone calls. Thirty-five old > Dorothy friends called up Wilson to see if her stenographic job had been filled up . . . She’s mailing personal appear- > ances, going fr San Francisco tv Salt Lake by p: ue to be queen of i the third annual American air I rodeo DID YOU KNOW i j That Paul Ca'i.r.agh was cnee a •member of the Royal Northwest ; Motw-tcd Police?
plush creation, tipped off by the jaunty little “wings” ( fluttering above the wearer's left eye. The model in he center is of French design executed in black velvet with unusual draping in the front which permits a glimpse of gold hair ornament. The large b w comes into its own in the model on the right, which I is also of black velvet. And if these do not suit yuur , fancy there are new berets and sailors.* i. . I • . — .i wl- tlirs n/itv sruilrtfa?
r mark the new fabric sailors. Hatter's plush has been used r with grand effect on some exquir site little turbans, most of them f with winged effects. For the lucky girl with golden hair there are . hats that permit the sheen of her ~ tresses to become part of the ; decorative scheme of the model. . For evening wear there are caps , made of net with strips of black , velvet mounted on this foundation. ( Black and white velvet is used in I alternative strips for one model. , Another novelty that will no doubt . be seen is ahat made of fine felt t strips like hair, forming a twisted . < ignon at the back of the neck. r The hair motif is carried out on ] another import which has small curled feathers at the edge, sug-1 j gesting cleverly the little ringlets . in which we often dress our hair. , Trimmings arc cleverly used, the bow theme being deftly handled. Many of the bows or . ears are faced with various fabrics including leather, flat fur and I moire taffeta, the latter being used to face large velvet bows. ~ while the suede-and fur is used on v . felts, the two making a fine comg bination for hats designed for! ■ sports wear. Strass ornaments I gleam from soft velvet folds and I etched crystal pins lend tone to! felts. Hackle pads and other flat ! feather fancies provide a good ; color note and. of course, much is i made of velvet pasted ostrich. For ; early Autumn wear, all sorts of novelty veilings will add allure and mystery to even the simplest ! chapeau. Toques of shirred velvet with short veils are charming for J evening wear, and no doubt before long we'll see the new veil with the cut-out monocle motif. i Some veils have disks of gilt kid or various colored velvet to match the hat trimming. AH in all, it’s going to Be a grand season for nice hats. And don't forget, a new hat is better than any tonic yet compounded. o ♦reunion - CALENDAR ♦ ♦ Sunday, Aug. 2r Eighteenth Annual Bloemkerl Lindeman reunion, Legion Memo- ■ rial Park, Decatur. Daily-Niblick reunion, Washington Park, Bluffton. 17th annual Leimenstoll-Martin reunion. Mrs. George Martin home. Blossom reunion, Lawton Park, Fort Wayne, U. S. Highway 27. Annual Crist reunion, Epwortih Forest, Lake Webster. Brentlinger annual reunion, Wren ' Memorial Park. Wren, O. Springer and Brandyberry reun- ' ion, Lehman’s Park, Berne. Butler family reunion. Sunset Park, rain or shine. Ainnual reunion of the Smith family, Sunset Park, Decatur. Kemmer family reunion, Sunset Park, southeast of Decatur. Annual Hakes reunion, Sunset Park, Decatur. Annual Kortenber and Hackman reunion, Sun Set Park. Sunday, August 28 Dillinger reunion, Sun Set par', Annual Weldy Reunion, Frank Aurand home. Decatur. I Annaul Standiford and Faulkner re- ; union, Wren, 0., Memorial Park. Wednesday. August 31 Weldy • Beery Family reunion, ; Legion Memorial Park. Decatur. Saturday, Sept. 3 Mumma family reunion, Franke Park, Fort Wayne. Sunday September 4 Roop family reunion, Legion Memorial Park. 'Annual Brown reunion, Sunset Park, Decatur. I Kelly reunion. Louis Kelly, Mon- ! roeville, Indiana. I
• — ♦ Answers To Test Questions Below are the Answers to the Test Questions Printed on Page Twa ♦ ‘ 1- Kipling. 2. Randolph Field. San Antonio, Texas. 3. —Veterans of Foreign Wars. 4. —Three-fourths. 5. —Sometimes it is classed as a continent; sometimes as an island. *.—Virginia. 7— As the anniversary of the! storming of the Bastile, which | ushered in the French revolution. 8. New York City. 9. Tarbes. France. 10.— "Pittsburgh of the South." MOLLISON TOO TIRED TO TRY RETURN TRIP CONTINUED FROM p. m. est.. yesterday, after 30 hours and 10 minutes in the air. He flew the Atlantic in a plane so small he could hardly squeeze into it. The tiny monoplane, which he has called "Heart's Content," was being checked and refueled at the St. John airport this morning for his departure. “It's a fine ship." he told the United Press. "It didn't miss a lick. All the way over I felt as though 1 had a trusted servant beneath my feet. And when I land-
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ji AOPSIS Young and beautiful Patricia Braithwait adored her father so murh that she was willing to sacrifice love and happiness to insure his future independence by marrying middle-aged Harvey Blaine for his wealth. It was Aunt Pamela who suggested that Pat marry wealth, warning that “the glamour of love wears dff”. Pamela spoke from experience; her own marriage to handsome Jimmie Warren, a young lawyer, was becoming dull. Jimmie, furious at Pat’s engagement. awakens to the realization that he,, himself, cares for her. Pat, with youth's optimism, hopes in vain that the young camper whom she only knows as “Jack”, and saw only oace. will rescue her from Blaine. Jimmie finds her in the garden) sobbing. He takes her in his arms and, in despair and hungry for love, she permits him to kiss her. Next day Pat breaks her engagement. Pamela is suspicious *hen, immediately following Pat’s broken engagement, Jimmie offers o loan Pat money to study art. Pat’s father decline's Jimmie's offer, saying his insurance was adequate for her needs. He plans to take Pat to Paris. CHAPTER FOURTEEN “I understood you were without resources,” said Warren In a low voice. “So I considered myself. I felt that to use this would be to rob my child. Your very excellent suggestion puts an entirely different face on the matter. Where I hesitated to use my child's only inheritance for our consumption I have no hesitation about using it to insure the permanent security of a profession f or her.” Pamela felt suddenly ashamed or her husband. Ashamed and oh, o sick Mr. Braithwait continued: “I ust make a flying trip to the planition to collect some small monies ving to me, see if I can rent, what mains of the land—however small he revenue, it will help—store my >ooks and arrange to collect my insurance. But I prefer not to take Patricia with me, as the trip will >e a hard one and I've no accotn■nodations for her; so if I may impose on you and your husband for a few days, Pamela — I couldn’t eave her in the hotel unchaperoned. In fact, I wouldn’t leave her with anyone else. Outside of school, she’s never been away from me.” “Os course, Cousin John,” said Pamela quickly. "Jimmie and I shall be delighted to look after her. We appreciate your confidence in us.” The orchestra had taken its place and was tuning up. Couples and little groups were drifting into the pavilion. “She is my one priceless jewel, but I know 1 can trust you and Warren to guard her sacredly,” the old man finished as the three rose, their tea order untouched. “He has put you on your honor, my dear husband,” thought Pamela bitterly. "He may not be as unsophisticated as we think.” In placing Patricia under his protection Mr. Braithwait had not misjudged Warren’s character. As long as Patricia remained in his house she would be safe from his advances . And after Palm Beach she would go to Paris. ... As the result of his own suggestion. . The irony of it stirred in him a desire to laugh aloud He was at the same time conscious of a blightj mg anger toward the old man who
ed, the plane was apparently in as tl good condition aa when I started." Captain "Jimmie." aa he II knowu »i to all of England, made aviation d history when he completed his g flight. The east-to west crossing of O the Atlantic has cost more Ilves A than any other flying course. Since b [ Nungesser and Coll, many men and n j women have perished trying to N reach America from Europe. Yet Mollison flew it, and having flown p it, didn't seem greatly excited P about it. a "I-didn’t think I would get so t tired," he said. "But there's no 0 sense in a man's making a fool of C himself." ■I Once he retched St. John from n Pennfield Ridge; Molliaona first w thought was of his wife. He ask- ( ed the United Press to get the () news to Urndon quickly. Then he t . put in a trans-Atlantic telephone t call. An hour later he talked to Amy p Johnson. She had stood on the beach at Portmarnock. Ireland to ~ watch him speed into the haze, the j, • great unknown over the Atlantic. f She told him when he called that he should go to bed and get some n ' sleep. That he tried to do later, i r She told hint, also, that in view H , of the fact that he would not be! ( , /turning back for England Inimed- 1 ] lately, she would take ship today | ( ,[for New York, to join him in the > ’(United States. i "I'll be in New York about al f week. I think.” the 27-year-old ( • Scotsman said. "Oh. yes, I’ll fly f i back. But Mrs. Mollison won’t he i with me. I'm too tired to talk about ( - the next flight. Yon know, the j flight to Europe is much easier (
seemed to take all he wanted from life, awaiting with imperturbable calm for the opening of the road ahead. "I sit up all night breaking my head over a solution of his problem, hand it to him, and he calmly replies, ‘Thank you. my dear fellow. The very thing. I’ll take my daughter as far from you as possible while I put your idea into operation. In the meantime, will you kindly hold out your hands so that I may tie them securely while I’m preparing to whisk her away. Thank you . . . that’s a good fellow.’ “Dam him! Well, I’ll show him that James Darcy Warren doesn’t get fifty thousand dollar fees out of an empty gourd. He shan’t take her away from me! She loves me. She doesn’t want to go to Paris. .." He came to a sharp stop. . . . How do I know she doesn't? Would he have asserted so positively that they were going, if she had not consented? She didn’t lie to me when she told me no other man beside her father had ever kissed her on the lips. . . . Strange in this age. . . "Oh, boys at prom dances have pecked me on the cheek or neck or ear,” she had told him. "Wherever they happened to land. But I never wanted them to kiss me, really. Seemed silly.” "Didn’t the girls ever sneak out and meet boys?” he had asked. “Oh, lots of them did. But — I don’t know — they asked me. I wanted to, but — I didn’t. It’s a funny thing to say it! But you know why I never did, Jimmie? It would have been fun. Not that I cared especially about the boys; but it was risky and thrilling to think about.” “Then why didn’t you, Pat?” he asked. “Because—don’t laugh, Jimmie—--1 know it’s silly, but—because Dadunis told that man who wanted to buy the plantation that the land was caving. Now. isn’t that absurd?” “You wouldn’t go out to meet boys because—” he began in astonishment. "I knew you’d think me silly. I never bothered to think things out in those days.” She spoke as of a distant past. “But I knew that was the reason. It had something to do with—why, being in the open, Jimmie. You see, Dadums-b -” “Kiss me, Pat,” he had commanded, a chill striking at his heart. He saw clearly, too clearly, ■ all that she had not bothered to think out. And also all that lay ' ahead of her and himself. .. . And he, in his experience, had hastily blocked her thought with caresses. But even as he cursed himself he recollected the wild sweetness of her and knew that he would not willingly give her up. Jimmie turned sharply back to the hotel, drifting around to the pool. On the high diving board stood Pat, ■ her. slim rounded form encased in a tight bathing suit, head thrown back, arms extended on each side like outspread wings, poised above the water. There was a rush of blood to his head. He was swept by the sickness of blind intoxication. ' His legs shook under him and he sat down. ' “By heaven,” he thought, “he i shan’t take her from me!” For a single moment she seemed i to wavor; then plunged downward : m the tnost graceful all dives, the swan dive. Forced to come up fer air, she
l, i ‘" "J"" 1 "' I hbt B J| John nhz,.,,, , " '"" I'li ■ /. J| Inclined Oven for inn, ~, 1 „ (a , >1 ibvtous,) hi . \dmu al It.-,oi -, h , >ed. Ih- s!,.|, t New York. Mollison 1,,,, b " L ' ....'.JI '’'"""-i < 'HI "rds and M;,.... w Then lie pinto,,,l |(1 ,J| imc on |,t. fi,,,,., , u J| Ottawa. J I' 1 "' 1.1- t,,, J inonopl.",, ■, . «est <.f S. .1,,! , ;‘MI the Maine coast. n e I Ir. the tank- ~,■ J| tinu-it 1..el it i,,,.,, tigue. MB " hl ’" lo, m th.- ~. pear.Ml h , ||, w H •Ver. iron! ... 'lg| journey. ||. 'M| "The fog w.,s th,. m. it . ,u:.. _. He was -o >. ,| h ■ sea. "'er II" It V !!..,! . V „H| lend at ll.u „.[J| caused Imn . , land. hH o Dr. H. TLi neiiiMsr Hie greet him. oH Get the Hafcit — fradt
had an impul.v - ing room. But cl ■ ■■■ the pool she sa d • won't run away a-d >• - I'm thinking of him I have forgotten ■'«. as he has." F r a -i on the edge of t.-r • .-a one of the g.rls ■■ •.- t .H| tended to see U a're-, r time. “'Lo, Jimmie'" she eaiied, ing a hand to .- »•J up the diving board. "I wonder if he's la .gr.i'.g a: little fool. Well, he'd see hcs al I care about him. . . H She did a ‘'jack's: / Th.isß she came up at - and went to hei - fl; felt tired and weal a : and silly. fl Well, Dadums will take Paris . . . and I'il bee me ar and take to sm«v a-.: powder and not car. f r tnen.M She had been in a fever all B loving and hating . : - •• The prospect of Fars r r thrill, such as it we .id have moned yesterday. W: her had proposed it. can •gr.eriiß of her moments < : revuisioxfl had jumped at the ■ "B even before they had complfl their plans she had begun to fl test—Wouldn’t it be better iffl studied a year in New York’ fl The expensive trip. . . . But fl father had pointed ■.■ it that of the trip would be recuverefl the first year by a r -diction infl cost of living. Unai.le to ad'fl any further argume- t t: at “look strange”, she had let the fl ter rest. ... A g rl arguing agfl going to Paris, she said to herfl would look funny. I Ever since, she had been fl state of stormy indecision. J minute she felt she couldn't, couldn’t leave Jimmie. The fl she loathed him . never wafl to see him again ai-.’fl middle aged man . . over thirty® kissing a girl and making her® like that! ] Os his marriage she thou fl little. Nor of Pamela. No fl Aunt Pam would be glad to get® of him. . . Funny she shoufl like him. . . . And she was ten® iq love with him once. Was it fl what she said, that one always® over love ? I But she wouldn’t get over it® ever . , . she could tell that by® way she felt . . . and she’d just® if she didn’t have him . . ■ I fl care ... I will ... I wont fl slave to fogey ideas. . . . But fl will Dadums say ’ ... I don tfl . . . He’s lived his life and I’ve ■ mine to live. ... j This reflection didn’t convM her. Dadums had lived her lift' 1 Since he had taken her from ■ dead mother’s arms he had ’1 for her. . . . Did Jimmie kiss efl girl he met as if he could her’ Did he kiss Aunt Fam ■ that at first? Ugh! Why hasntl tried to set me alone today. I Maybe there was a reason! Aunt Pam getting sick of hint I Maybe I’d get sick of him. . • • 1 a little sick of him now. . J Her deep-down unackpowl ■ feeling as regards Pamela had J expressed in action —not in thoufl She had definitely, and »- s I nains, avoided her lovely m |a 1 Why had Daddy accepted an | gagement to dine with them-J supposed there was no help 1 tonight; but how could she 1 Jimmie and Aunt Pam after had happened ? , (To Be Continued) J C 1»M. to Kin* tealure* *1
