Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 106, Decatur, Adams County, 3 May 1935 — Page 7
Khleuciie ■fllVE PLAY SLal WaKhei- League Wnc Has Satui- ■ Jay. Sunday win ll.ifei. ggß s.1:111.1:0 ■K I'm mngiiim . IK*,.. ■ ' " ' ~ ■Hi 1 : |. 1 >... \i, w HH < 1 in * . te ■ -
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Joseph Ihjpden-Adele Belberlch Bet'Ji Winters, the defendant — Agn«i Gainer. >i Allie Traynor, ueventeen md livI ing next door to the Carlylas—Ebthe! Koendman. iiloie, maid In the Carlyle Home—--4 Helen Koenivnan. ROCHESTER IS <'i>.XTlXr|,;i> FHOM PAC.IC ONIO 1 lUtletlH. Dr. D. L. Coldwill, treasurer of ■ the Ebeneaer orphan home at Flat ’ Hock, Ohio, gave a talk telliiiK of this institution. 1 He stated that the orphan's home is now in need of endowment. Money has been left to the institution in wills but when the es- ’ tales have been closed there was* found to be no assets left. "Bn- * dowmeuts have been successful," he stated, “the money has been ■ kept intact. We do not have any great debts and reqquire only uuf- : fleient money for operating ex- ' penses.” "This is not an asylum," he con- ' eluded, "it is a home. We are dealing with human personalities." The Rev. G. Bruce Cameran of i Cincinnati, Ohio, a representative of the American Bible Association • spoke to the conference. He said, "there are now 952 translations of the Bible into dist ferent languages and dialects in
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1935.
the world. The Bible association has a tmique service for the blind, selling them books at about one tenth of their cost. Now since the now talking books have been perfected, we are selling records to the blind at 25 cents a record. "We are rendering a new service by Stimulatitg the use of the Bible. We recognise the fact that reading is not keeping up with circulation. Wc are urging that the Bible be read. "It was 400 years ago on October I, 19:15, that the first complete English Bible was completed. We will celebrate the 400th anniversary of the St. James translation tills year. We are asking that each conference offer a resolution in which it agrees to support the observance of the anniversary. "We have national and state committees for assisting in the obser-| vance of the anniversary. We are endeavoring to bring the Bible back to where it belongs in the nation and to put one in every home." His proposal was referred to the commltte on resolutions. o COMMITTEES OF CONTINI ED from PAGE ONI? I and Leslie Doster. Minimum pastoral support. Rev.. B. H. Franklin and Pun! Ruroker; annual conference benevolences. I Rev. F. F. Thornburg and C. L.' Walters; general conference ben-1 evolences. Rev. E. Burns Martin 1 and I. B. Hart. The Epworth Forest institute on I Lake Webster will hold its annual' institutes for the districts from I July 15 to August 4, inclusive. Rev.: C. B. Croxall, Warsaw, announced. I The church conference will con-| tinue in session until Monday. The
|2AavoucradE"| V B by FAITH-BALDWIN . Copnrerrr 1931, by faith BAtmmr dtstributfd bykthb ffatures syhdtcate,
SYNOPSIS Young and beautiful Fanchon ! Meredith leaves San Francisco by I airplane to escape arrest in connec- , tion with a murder in which her sweetheart, Tony, is implicated. She had not known that he was a gunman. Evelyn Howard, whom Fanchon had met on a voyage from Hawaii, is aboard. She is enroute to New York to live with her wealthy aunt, Mrs. Allison Carstairs, whom she has never seen. The plane crashes and all but Fanchon are killed. Grasping the opportunity to start life anew, Fanchon goes to the Carstairs home as Evelyn. Mrs. Carstairs affection wins her heart. At Southampton, awaiting the arrival of her son, Collin, Mrs. Carstairs warns Fanchon not to take him seriously. CHAPTER XIII I The man who approached her was very tail and broad shouldered. He was quite dark, with thick black hair and dark eyes and a small mustache. He walked as lightly as a cat, he wore slightly shabby, expensive clothes beautifully, and he was very good-looking and in a very bad temper. He walked directly to Fanchon, stopped beside her and stared down at her. "I suppose you’re Evelyn Howard,” he said. "Why. yes,” Fanchon told him, still dazed from the sun and her half sleep. He remarked, abruptly. "We may as well have it out heI fore my mother comes. I don't know what she has told you. I would rather tell you myself anyway. I am perfectly welt aware of your reasons for coming here. But dealing with a sentimental woman is one tiling and dealing with me is another. I'd like you to understand once and for all that I am quite conscious of your game and that I will block it at every turn, if possible. If my mother hasn't sense enough to see you are here under entirely false pretenses ... I have!” The color drained from Fanchon’s face. It isn't possible I she told herself wildly. For the last week or sc, with returning strength there had some to her a feeling of peace and of safety. And day by day she had grown fonder of, and more grateful to, Jennie Carstairs. She realized now with a wrenching ping that the great price of discovery and the relinquishing of her masquerade would not be the danger threatening her from exposure, the danger from Tony himself, but the disillusionment and righteous anger which she must face from Jennie Carstairs. This was Collin then. She stared at him. He pulled up a low rustic bench, sat down, pulled a flat gold cigarette case from his pocket, opened it anal meticulously I offered it to Fanchon. Mechanically i she shook her head, fighting for composure, for words. And waiting for him to go on, to tell her how he knew what he knew. "Now," said Collin Carstairs, lighting a cigarette and expelling the first blue smoke, "now, we may as well have it out! I know, of course, that coming to New York under my mother’s protection was infinitely better than indefinite school teaching I don't blame you for jumping at the opportunity. I merely wanted to explain to you if my mother lias not—and I don't suppose site has—why 1 am unalterably opposed to this arrangement . . . Cousin Evelyn,” he added, satirically. Fanchon’s breath came easier. So, his quarrel was not with her, not with Fanchon Meredith, not with "Tony's broad,” not with her masquerading and her deception, but with Evelyn! Well, as Evelyn, she could deal with him! In her relief, excitement and a sort of fighting 1 spirit flooded her viry v«ms. She ' sat up, erect, lb the swing and re-
Sunday programs will be held in crowds expected to attend will ho the Shrine Auditorium where large accomodated.
Sunday programs will be held in the Shrine Auditorium where Inrgc
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f “I marvel,” Collin remarked, “that you were permitted to teach school t so long.”
' garded him. The wind ruffled her 1 blue-black curls, the warm golden I skin was flushed with rose, and the ! strange turquoise eyes were dark ; with anger and emotion. * “I marvel," Collin remarked, regarding her with frank, if unwilling admiration, “that you were per--1 mitted to teach school so longl ’ Four years, was it not? And I know that Hawaiian moons are very lovely and young men very susceptible. ■ I’ve been in Hawaii,” he said. 1 “Are you trying to pay me compli- ' ments?” Fanchon demanded. It was her first word to him. He j flicked the ashes from his cigarette ' and smiled. Her voice was as ’ lovely as she, he admitted ungrudg- : ingly. And there was a flash of Steel through all the loveliness nad soft- ’ uess of voice and person. Here was. Ire admitted to himself further, no simpering, silly, gushing little creature, as he had allowed himself to ' imagine she would be from her Ict--1 ters to his mother and his general ' mental impression of her, but a very beautiful and probably intelligent girl. An enemy worthy of his mettle. “I'm not complimentary,” he replied. and smiled, "I'm merely truthful. You arc far better to look upon than I dreamed. Very easy on the eyes. But that doesn't alter the case.” “I take it,” Fanchon said, demurely, “that you are not beside yourself with rapture at my appearance here. Why? What have I done to you? Arc you afraid,” she mocked him, knowing better, “that I will rob you of any of your rightful inheritance?" His face darkened. He was really, she thought, an astonishingly handsome man. She hated him and despised him but his good looks could not be denied. They looked at one another with hostility, she with hot resentment, he with cool rancour. The very air of the rose garden, fragrant, soft, sea-wooed, sun steeped, seemcd*snddenly electric with this curious and out of proportion antagonism between two young people.
crowds expected to attend will bo accomodated.
“Hardly,” replied Collin Carstairs, I with forced indifference, “I happen to have far more money than I need, i It is not my business nor concern what my mother chooses to do with her own. I would have been per- i fcctly willing if she had accepted half a dozen girls . . . strangers—waifs, if need be, out of the gutter. T would have been more than willing, I would I have helped. But—you I” he said, Scornfully. k “What about me?” demanded Fanchon, angrily, "what, exactly is the matter with me . . .?” “Far be it from me to elucidate," answered Collin, casually, “I think you know, perfectly well. Yet my hostility dates back further than your—escapades." Escapades? thought Fanchon, frantically. Evelyn . . . ? denture, prim, mouselike Evelyn .. . and escapades? “In the first place," Collin went on slowly, “Your mother’s quarrel with her family is none of my concern. But when, whether she had right on her side or not, at the time of the break, when my mother wrote tier, making most generous and, I would say, abject offers of peace, yottr father took it upon himself to write my mother in terms that were little short of insulting. And your mother not only permitted this but encouraged it. "Why, knowing what heartbreak this action afforded my mother, should I welcome you into the family simply because you found it expedient to change your mind? When, at your father's death my mother wrote you, and you alone, the letter you wrote to her in return was far from friendly. 1 can, as I have said, understand that you changed your i mind because of the material advan- j tages held out to you by my mother. | I can understand that perhaps you . were anxious to leave San Francisco before the heads of the school in which you taught learned of certain of your Hawaiian adventures.” Copyright 1931 By Faith Baidu in Diitribut-d by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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