Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 25, Decatur, Adams County, 29 January 1938 — Page 3

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® < i.i' , ‘’ " r ' ,l ’ !t;,, ‘’'”’ ’ 4 hool np>' of Hm(4 street. x>IKJ..... - X» •#*•”■ " Moo- will ■R -M Mr- 1 -S.hnfor u®L NEIGHBORS PARTY . . ■ *^K,j ■ fr >mN -njoyMl a bunco ho hi>m<' >'f Mrs. Frank •]■. . stlav evening. Folr, m> v ' !,iir ' ani ‘ M'^K., ljr; ,.« A potluck then enjoyed. ■E ""!•■ Mrs Frank M!< vthur (’loss. Miss |^gk|“ IV .< Mrs Halt. Mrs. Hila ( Mrs Bill Hoe Mrs. Jenny ■g V- C1;.,. . ~ L.imim. Mrs. ■Eg. ;■.■.■- ' M:- George Selly.. William August. Mrs. 'li^Hsjl'.vxovl M's laiveni® Bowi m " v rs °"- Psi hua Xi Sorority will ..... I ot Mrs - Krigb Bowen. , ( olumbia •*^Kjg|. )u ' ,ll ' r ' e '■' 1 ‘ ""’nth'y meet- .. Hall. Tuesday a seven-thii ty o\ lock. JOHNSON gfi,®RTAINS FRIENDS v ... i t; '.. ■ : her friends at her i-rening. with a rhurn ' ■SBn'i’f f ar,v ,>riz '“ for hißh bridge was presented to ■hnA's .0 Kohls and Misr. Phy! K|flLgia:id ■-■ | the piize in re course luncheon was by candlelight, at small appointed in pink and white gu«ts were Miss Evelyn ■ki.Vs Miss Pauline Affolder, .Miss KH& H .iaian i Gerald Strickler. SHcrte Hanning. Eugene Knodle. Keller, and the hostess. ■ Hiss ohnson. CLUB SHOLDS INTERESTING MEET ■'jK'-- rn.'Urbers of the HietorKgJßHl'ib met Wednesday after tie a Ktt & home of Mrs. Sam Butler. the club collect and event®, Mrs. Judson rass- ■ presented an interesting and ■ bstiictive paper on ' Mountain ■ Biw said that mountain music Eis fol-. songs; songs that reveal ■ ttelistory of rhe poor mountain They were carried across Mtaa ..’..1 over the mountains by : nbudours who sang the love trajedy and cur-

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t S.' HARRISON CARROLL | lopjritht. 1K1« ? Mfaf Future* Syadirste. la*. « No Ute story I a s ' ar bas nad more reperthan the one about Powell's male secretary, actress was quoted as saying one of his duties was to fend , off autograph seekers and overMV US admirers. Oddly enough, j th* tans are rallying to the star’s I iefe: Especially those along I the ioute of the S. S. Santa Paula, 0® which Eleanor traveled from MBAngeles to New York, fan writes from Cristobal I . e stress sang songs from of the ship. Another, in Qty, recalls that she was ; hours signing autographs she c °uld get away from the HVn Holl y wo °d autograph clan "2 ear this out. Eleanor always 171’ n one o f the most accessible : SF * celebs. .t^f e 'J tieth Century-Fox has rtS, a three-year non-marriage S? la, ° Ar leen Whelan’s condnvii h \. e is the Hollywood Cin--3 a -*} 10 has been Put into the ■ 1 Kl dnaped” and who has for the Scarlett mm.,' have linked her at 0( AUCe Faye ’ S 11/amt t ? riu fOr Harr y Glick t Lanipiosi - two youths IKl' . f and 1)01,1 hopelessly K inf v antile their song "On av o j ; JSt bought ruxL” f n f’ . Gll a Rainy AfterPm tio use in a musical, and Sidents 3 r'u ,ntroduce it at the ■ t s Ball tn February. Ecamo^’ husband . Manuel ■ c& la becoming an Ameri•se oT\? gets a break be ' Wess lt h l» 7‘ tU ‘ nage to the ret Dar , o ; elimln ates taking out WbleTtL and win make him O' in Mev y X ars Del Campo, K:en C ? ty ’ U a British ■ because his father, half

CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline. 11 A. M, 1 Fanny Macy • Phones 1000 — 1001 Saturday 1 Chicaken Supper, Zion Lutheran 1 Church. 5 to 7 o’clock. Monday lArt department, Mrs. John T. 1 Myers, 7:45 p. m. | Dramatic Section, .Mrs. Bryce I Thomas, 7:30 p. m. Music department. Mrs. Avon Burk, 7:30 p. m. Research club, Mrs. H. B. Heller,' 2:30 p. m. , Literature Department, Miss Elizabeth Peterson. 7:30 p. m. Tuesday Tri Kappa. Elks Home, 8 p. m. Evangelical Dutiful Daughters. Mrs. Dick McConnell. 7:30 p. m. Zion Reformed W. M. S., church ' 2:30 p. m. Union Chape! A. B. C. Class. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Bryan, 7 p. m. Women of the Moose, M-s. Lulu 'Schafer, 2:30 p. m. ’ i Psi lota Xi, Mrs. Bowen, i 7:30 p. m. C L. off C.. K. of C. Hail. 7:30 p. m. Wednesday Historical Club, Mrs. W. F. Beery 2:30 p. m. Supper Bridge Club, Mrs. William Linn. 6:30 p. m. Thursday Pinochle Club. Mrs. Jesse Edgell, 7:30 p. m. Decatur Homestead Economics 'club, Mrs. Ernest Scott. I rent events. , ‘The radio has revived the Interest in this kind of music. List year, I 1937. over six hundred of these folk songs were compiled in one volume -by Miss Dorothy Scarborough, who was interested in preserving this type of music. She visited the mountaineers of various state®, using an automobile if possible, if not, on foot or on mule back. She used a speak-o-phone to register the tune. Many songs had as many as fifty verses." Excerpts from the songs were read, some were amusing, others ead, but all were interesting. Mrs. Homer Lower gave a sub topic of a song with fifty verses, sung by a mountaineer at his wife’s funeral. Following the business meeting the hostess served refreshments. The next meeting will 'be Wednesday afternoon at two-thirty o’clock at the home of Mrs. W. F. Beery, with Mrs. J. N. Fristoe in charge of the study period o ARRIVALS 'Mr. and Mrs. Randolph F Brandyberry. 315 N. Tenth street, are the parents of a six and one half pound girl baby, born at 10:14 o’clock this morning at the Adams county memorial hospital. This is

English and half Spanish, was born in England. Jack Haley’s 13-year-old daughter, Gloria, came so near to injury on the Beverly Hills bridle path. Her horse bolted, jumped the hedge and ran for half a block through thick traffic. After bringing the animal under control, the youngster fell off and sat in the middle of the street crying. . . . Has Bill Powell changed his mind about the South American tour? Latest report is that he and Ronald Colman will tour Mexico together before Powell’s next M. G. M. assignment. .... Phil Harris fancies himself as 'a nimrod, but ask him about the time the shotgun went off accidentally in his house, peppering the ceiling in his den full of holes. nR-K-O nas lured Frances Gifford back from her honeymoon in San Francisco to play a part in “Vivacious Lady”. Part of the deal was the promise of a month’s vacation around Decoration Day, so the starlet and James Dunn can take in the races in Indianapolis. There’s been anothe. inside job at the Gable dressing room at M G. M. Souvenir hunters (or could they be ribbers?) first stoic the name-plate off his door and yesterday got away with the knob. The star doesn't know whether to put in a swinging door or just to install a drape. Add to Hollywoodiana: Jeanette MacDonald's secretary now has a secretary herself. . . . Also a suite of offices in Hollywood. J. Weissmuller, Preston Foster, John Wayne and Ward Bond are off to Catalina to hunt pigs. ... And Tarzan carries a gun on this jaunt. . . . Anita Louise and Ronald Reagan are a new twosome. . . . Gene Raymond’s blond hair will be darkened four shades in "Stolen Heaven”. Director Andrew Stone thinks it will make him look more like a European crook. . . . And •still the show must go on. With Robert McWade not 24 hours dead, the late actor’s brother, Edward, went through a comedy scene yesterday in th* Warner film, “Whit* Banners",

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, JANUARY 29, 1938.

the float child In the family, and I was named Leah Gertrude. Mrs. i Brandyberry was formerly Mls.i I Marlon Johann Margollei, Virgil Allen is the u'nme of a baby boy born to .Mr. and Mrs. Vlr | gll Wolfe of Bush street Friday, The baby weighed eight and onehalf pounds at birth. SLIGHT RELIEF J-fflyi IXtBED FIU>M HAUK ONK) It was feared it may have serious effect on the flood waters of th® Riwk river which Inundated thousands of acres in the lowlands south of Rock Island, 111. Dozens ! of families were forced to evacuate ■ from their homes, Representative temperatures: [Greenville. Me.. 0; Devils Lake. N. D . 4; Chicago, 30; Yuma. Ariz. 76; Brownsville. Tex. 72; Moorhead. Minn.. 6; Atlanta. 20; Miami, *5; New Orleans. 40. U. S. GUNBOAT 1 'rytnM r/nynwy ' into Chiang Kai-Shek, commander-1 : in-chief of the Chinese armies, had | i made another visit to the central ' front to supervise Chinese prepar-1 ations for decisive battle. Chinese reports from Canton said that Japanese planes had raided Hoihow. on Hainan Island off the south coast. Twelve civilians ; were killed and several houses destroyed in two raids, it was said. o Fish Prefer Red Macaroni Provincetown. Mass. — (IP) — Fish prefer Italian macaron! dyed i red It a boatload of hake is proof. Lawrence Johnson. 24. used that Crime Stirs Mexico 1 ? 1 *> Ana Saavedra de Miravete Escape of Ana Saavedra de Miravete after allegedly confessing she hired two men to slay her husband, the wealthy Miguel de Miravete, , former congressman and high customs official, has aroused national interest in Mexico. Observers predict grave political exposures if she is recaptured, and hint that her escape was sanctioned by certain officials.

View Japan as “Pushover'’ for Western Power v < Vi ? i ‘-A / 1 > * JkL\ J i re. ' IKWlißmwi soldiers wounded, but they smile |* _ i gA IO * * BLhMtWV ref juß B&W? - • < -* * 9k-JI Hflif v wl j lannlng modern machine gun IMO Men are power for this artillery unit

Though Japanese soldiers are brave under fire to the point of fanaticism, the opinion is shared by members of the high command of the U. S, army that the Nipponese would be no match for troops of the United States or another western power Military observers and analysts point out that, though

Drama in Court at Wright Trial ==mn ■■■■■MWl jL . K s 7 ." 'W A SI • * Defense Attorney Jerry Giesler on floor * -r< - 1 « —— W .■ ■> ® Courtroom drama at the Paul Wright trial in Los Angeles on a charge of slaying his wife and his best friend. Defense Attorney Jerry Giesler gets down on the floor to show the jurors how the body of the "best friend" lay on the floor of the Wright home when police arrived the night of the slaying. Wright allegedly shot and killed his wife and the friend when he found them in a compromising position.

| bait with the result. Old-tlms fish- r errnan, denouncing the departure, continue to stand by their old re- , liable worms. o Movie Thriller Realistic Sydney —(UP)—G-men films ap-1 parent’y have a marked educational value. Under the influence of one which was being shown at the theater the entire audience left and chased a masked and armed bandit, who held up the box office cashier. The bandit escaped, but empty handed. 0 Bell Unique in U. S. History Milford. X. H. —(UP) —Hanging in the Town House ie a 135-year-old | bell that has sounded a death knell ; for every President but George I Washington. Cast in 1892 by Paul ' Revere, it remains mellowtoned and ' uncracked tolling the hours daily. I o_ CUTS HOURS OF FKOM PAOE ONE/ I suggested “share-the-work” for the i mill laborers. Under the new system, office i employes now working five and J one-half days per week will work only five days. The 9 1-11 percent salary reduction represents the half day taken from the workweek, and will permit retention of employes who otherwise would have to be “laid off.” The spokesman said the new employment system would affect "everyone, from the highest paid I executive down to the least-paid

the Japanese have succeeded in their China offensives, they are not good soldiers for the reason they are ‘‘over-disciplined", and the army is inferior in artillery, compared to infantry. Aviation observers say the Japanese are not good aviators because of visual handicaps. v ]

< clerk.” included in the concerns that will be affected are Carnegie-, Illinois, American Steel and Wire of Cleveland. Columbia Steel of San Francisco, Tennessee Coal. , Iron and Railroad company of Birmingham. National Tube of Pittsburgh. Oil Well Supply company of Pittsburgh. H. C. Frick Coke company and allied coal producing concerns in the Pittsburgh area. Union Supply company of Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh Limestone company, Universal Atlas Cement company of Chicago. o Revenue Collector Here Next Friday A deputy collector from the office ■ of Will H. Smith. United States coli lector of internal revenue, will be in the city February C to assist taxpayers in making their federal income tax returns. The service is 1 free. o City To Name Official Sniffer Sausalito, Cal. —(UP)—The city i council has been called upon to ■ name an official sniffer. The city has been suffering from nauseating odors that might come from a reuaction plan*., the bay itself or other sources which it is necessary to determine definitely before the council launches punitive measures. o Roy Hall of the Central Sugar Company transacted business here last evening after several days in Chicago. '

Word has been received here that Dick Sutton has been transferred ' from the Morris store in Mt. Vernon ! Illinois, to the Morris store in Noblesville. He is a former resident of I this city. Mr. and Mm. Sutton plan | to move In the next few days. Mrs. Sutton, formerly Miss Dorothy Lit- ' tie, of this city, plans to visit hero oefore establishing their new horn®. Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Darkless of this city. Mr. and Mrs. D. W Beery 1 I of Fort Wayne will be entertained at dinner, Sunday, at the heme of | Mr and Mrs. D. O. Stagier of Fort Wayne. The occasion will be Mrs. beery’s birthday anniversary. Richard Schug returned to 7nd-1 I ianapolls yesterday, where be re- ■ sumed his studies at the Indiana ! Medical school after visiting with j his mother. Mrs. Effie Schug of this | elty. Mr. and Mrs. Dale W. McMillen ! visited in New Orleans several days this week, sailing from there for Guatemala, Central America, with a party of friends. They will return in a couple of weeks and go to Miami for a several weeks | outing. Judge MalcOlm Hatfield of St.' Joseph. Mo., has published a book entitled “Children in court" in which he says that unless parents will aid. the courts cannot com- | pete with the cheap dance hall, divorce mill, road house, pool room and questionable theater and ; magazine. He says ten million children in this country are not affiliated with any church and cannot i be expected to develop character. It is published by the Paebar Com-

\GIVEHER WINGST

CHAPTER XXXIII In later years of her life when the laughing voices of her daughters rose from a tennis court and wafted through the windows of her beautiful bedroom, Julie Allerdyce was to remember, with a humiliation that years of love and protection could not erase, her awakening the morning after Stanley Lombard destroyed her hope of earning money to pay a debt of honor. The events of that day were expiated by the woman that she became, but their mark left a scar on her spirit. That morning the laughter of merry voices was a torment to her, mingling with the voice within herself that taunted her. The voice that repeated her plight. B'hat will you do now/ The question came at her in letters that blurred out the beauty of the blue sky seen through the window through which she gazed with dull eyes The luxury about her was a cruel reminder of her own poverty. If she could get a job as a saleswoman, a reception clerk or some other berth in which experience was not required, she couldn’t make enough money to pay off her debt for a year. The weeldy pittance she could afford to set aside wouldn’t pay for the linen sheet that covered her. Wearily she closed her eyes. Her untouched breakfast tray was beside her bed. She sipped some of the coffee, hoping to bring some life to her leaden limbs, some strength with which to solve her problem. The idea occurred to her that she could go to Nancy Lombard and make a confession of her folly. But Nancy’s cool, calm face seemed no longer coo) but cold and unfriendly. Julie knew that when she had told Nancy, Nancy would say, “Oh, it’s quite all right," and Julie would wish that she could sink through the floor. Naturally Nancy would have to explain to Elsa and Elsa would find some way to tell Paul. Paul! Why hadn’t she thought of that before? The palms of her hand were suddenly moist and her hair clung to )er perspiring forehead. The enormity of the idea that came to her shook her inwardly. She pressed her hands to her heart to still its fast beating. They felt cold through the silk of her night-gown. Her knees trembled when she got out of bed. The needle shower revived her. When she was dressed, she felt strong hopeful, determined. Capable of seeing her plan through, putting on the best performance of her life. Confident that she could carry it off. No one had known with what terror she had faced flying. No one would know now what was in her mind. And if sometime it was to be uncovered, it would be too late. When she came downstairs she found the others had gone to the pool. She returned to her room and put on her swimming suit, inspected her face carefully in the mirror, lifted her drawn features with a bright smile, practiced animation before the mirror. It was Saturday and Julie saw that there were new guests grouped around the edges of the pool. She saw also that Paul was there. And Elsa. She waved to the others and went right to Paul. "Sleepy head!" he accused. "Getting a beauty sleep for you,” she said spacing her words meaningly. His eyes asked a question. She met them without wavering. Then she said, “Darling, will you see if you can tie the string on my slipper so that it will stay tied?” She sat on the edge of the pool, stretching her smooth ankle for him to tie the string. It was a beautiful

; I>O YOI’ COLLECT POSTAGE STAMPS? If yon ar® an amateur collector, you will find practical Informsi tlon for the beginner in our Washington Service Bureau's Imoklet I “STAMP COLLECTING." It contains hints and suggestions on bow ! to get the’ most enjoyment from the hobby. Semi the coupon below for your copy: CLIP COUPON HERE Frederick M. Kerby, Director, Dept. B 103, Democrat’s Service Bureau, 1013 Thirteenth Street, Waahington, D. C. t 1 want the booklet on "Stamp Collecting" and enclose a dime i (carefully wrapped) for return postage and handling costa: NA M E I STREET and No. j I CITY STATE 1 am a reader of the Decatur Daily Democrat, Decatur, Ind.

— I pany of New York City. A new harness shop, operated by 'Abraham Lehman, Peter J. Neuensch wander and Levi Schwartz, opened Friday in Berne. . Wesley Neuer.sc’awander of Berne i stopped for a visit this morning. He was enroute home from Fort Wayne where he accompanied his sister. Mrs. Ross Hartman of Mondovi. Wisconsin who was in Berne to attend the funeral of their mothi er - o - — Divorces Rise in Britain London —(UP) —Evidence of the increase of divorce in Great Britain is afforded by a glance at the business waiting to be dealt with at the law court®. A total of 1,955 cases confront the three judges of the divorce division. That figure is exceeded only by the number filed soon after the World War. o Druggist Bowls 65 Years St. Lonis, —(UP) —Age i« no handicap for one bowler. Charles H.

ankle. The pressure of Paul's fini gers told her that he knew it was. ) When ho finished, she thanked | him with a smile and lowered her- . self into the water. She could as- , ford to proceed slowly. She gave ■ herself a whole day—no longer— I making her moves slowly, calcu- . lated moves. They had lunch in their swim I suits on the grass beside the pool. Julie moved away from Paul and sat beside Keats Desmond. She found occasion to tell him a story, ! leaning toward him so that he had to bend his head to listen, laughing , with him as though they shared a secret Once when Pau! came over ’ to them, she stopped speaking, saw that Paul wanted to know what they ’ were talking about When he had gone back to his : place, she looked at him under her 1 lashes with satisfaction. Elsa was 1 talking to him and he was paying • no attention to her remarks. His eyes strayed back to Julie and 1 Keats. During the first few days that i Julie had spent at Pennybrook, she i thought the hours passed like minutes. When there was always nomei thing pleasant to do, the day spun . round to evening before you realized it. But the last three days had ■ been days to endure, not to live. And now on Saturday, by a reverse process, it was passing too ' quickly. i Already the afternoon was fading i and they had scarcely finished i lunch. An attendant brought out a ' tray of cocktails. It was four o’clock. Julie accepted one. She liked to I have a cocktail because it was a : pleasant social custom, she didn’t i like to drink. People always talked . about having a cocktail or a highI ball even at parties in Fayette but i they didn’t drink very many. Paul I did, she noticed. But Paul could i drink like a gentleman. She wondered if there was anything he did i that she wouldn’t like. She doubted I it. Everything about him was exactly right. His voice. His manner. : His graceful way of living. He didn’t talk about Wall Street, stocks and bonds, law cases, salaries, work i or a career. Some men in Paul’s . position would have made a pose of it, felt it was necessary for a man I to talk about business. Paul was i above it He had plenty of money, his money put other people to work; • he was fulfilling hi* obligations. ; There had to be people to work and people to play How well Paul played. He knew everything about all the important social things that people talked about. Like what horse won the ’ Derby in 1932 and whose horse would win the Santa Anita this year. He’d seen all the big prizefights, went back to Yale every week-end in the football season for the big games. He had a speed boat, a string of polo ponies and his plane was even now in the meadow beside Stanley’s. He had a box at the opera which he'never used, attended all the First Nights at the theatre, was known by every head waiter at important places and belonged to eleven good clubs. He was a graceful gentleman of today and all hers tomorrow, Julie decided. It wasn’t as though she were a scheming woman, wanting him for his money. Or merely wanting him to save her from disgrace. And disclosure that she couldn’t pay a gambling debt was one of the few ways a girl could be publicly disgraced these days. It wasn’t like that at all. She loved Paul, had decided from the first that she wanted to marry him. And he loved her. He’d as much as told her so the night before. He’d said he was crazy about her. Dick hadn’t even said that and how easy it had been for her to become engaged to him! She swept Dick out of her thoughts. Dick

PAGE THREE

Hahn, 86-year-old druggist, has been knocking over tenpins since 1872. He playa regularly every Tuesday night as a member of the team in the druggists' bowling league, i which has been in existence since 1891. o ■■ - - — Urge To Dance Too St’ong Melbourne —(UP) — Dances are few In some parts of Australia. Wll’iam Packward wanted to dance so badly that when his train failed to stop at the town where he knew one was in progress, he pulled the emergency cord. He jumped off, went to the dance. A judge fined him S4O next day for stopping the train. o ;— Cooking Edict Faces Girls Hobart, Australia —(UP)—Tasmanian high school girls must choose between higher education or cooking. When they reach the age of 13 and do not intend to study for higher examinations, they are placed automatically in courses of domestii- training.

- would understand when aiiv explained to him that she had been i swept off her feet. Dick had asked - her repeatedly if she was happy. - He had been so anxious for her to e be happy. Well, she would be - divinely happy when it was all over - and her troubles erased. Her eyes met Paul’s and she sent t him a little message in her smile. Those soft, shy smiles across a j room. Away of dropping the eyes e quickly and looking up suddenly ; again. She knew them well and i used them skillfully. All that afterj noon she played that game. Too i often she met Paul’s eyes above his r lifted glass but she saw no warning v in it. ? There were more cocktails before dinner. Julie refused them; she had s woman’s work to do. r At ten when she was going ups stairs to get her wrap, she lingered j after the other girls had gone to 3 their rooms, sent a signal to Paul. 1 He rose at once and came to her. “Paul, this may be the last chance t 111 have to see you aione. Wili you e drive me to the club?" They were - going to a dance at the Golf Club. Paul squeezed her hand. “You 1 bet! Stay upstairs until the others - have gone.” 1 She came downstairs a little later with her wrap over her arm. Paul - was pouring himself a high-ball. He > drained it and put the glass down. “We don’t have to go yet,” he ; said. His voice sounded repressed, 1 excited. “Let’s go out to the i garden." r He took her in his arms at once. "Are you playing with me?" He > almost gasped the question. i “No," she answered. “I’m .. . t I’m in love with you, Paul. And I’m I . . . I’m miserable about it. You - don’t know about it but I’ll have to t leave. . . .*’ I “Nol No, you can’t leave me!” I "Ever?” His mind was not on words. 1 “Ever,” he repeated. 1 She strained away from him. “Paul ... do you mean that you - want to marry me?" He drew his hand across his eyes, i A confused gesture. i Her arms were around his neck. : “Oh, darling, we couldn’t be mari ried right away.... I mean not th* ! kind of wedding you would expect-" i Paul didn’t say anything. His i fumbling hands crumbled the tull* , of her frock. “We could . .we could elope." His hands dropped away. His I eyes in the moonlight wer* blurred. "Elope?” He repeated stupidly. ' Then: “We’ll elope! We’ll fly to : Maryland!" I Then he was half-dragging her > by her wrist toward the meadow > where his plane was. Julie was in a i daze of apprehension blended with • relief. She would have followed him ’ anywhere.' But when he made for ' Stanley Lombard’s plane, she pro- , tested. “Not his!" > "Get in!” he commanded thickly. • She got into the rear cockpit i How Paul got the thing started I she never could remember. She only • remembered that suddenly they were taking off dizzingly, righting > the balance of the machine by som* miracle, and ascending. By all the ’ rules they should have straightened > out leveled off in the air but they didn’t I i With the rush of air in her face, ' Julie realized that Paul was drunk I i He didn’t have the plane under con- ■ troi! Almost half-conscious from panic, ' she sa w that the dual control device wasn’t locked. She could handle it • from where she was if Paul could be ' made to drop the controls. He couldn't hear her screaming at him. ' Praying as she had never prayed ' for Divine Guidance, she picked up ■ a monkey wrench from the floor and with all her strength brought it down on Paul’* head. (To be continued) Cwrriihi tn M.rt. Sllatr* Oillrllwrt Klai TMUirw Sneirata, Im.