Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 48, Number 168, Decatur, Adams County, 19 July 1950 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Fablishod Every Evening Except Bunday By THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. ' _ Incorporated Entered at the Docatar, lad. Part Ottee aa Second CUac Matter Dtek D. Haller - _ President „ A. R. Holthoeae ....... Editor J. H. Heller ... — Vice-President C. E. Holtbowso Treasurer - ~ i" .1., —.... .. — 1 R*ft**‘ —* ---■ By Stell la Adams and Adjoining Counties; One year. Ml Sia-rttmtha. UJ&: 1 months. SI ?S By Mall, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties; One year, >TM; « mouths, M.T»; > months. UN By Carrier. 90 cents per week. Single copies, 4 certs
Do oats bugs do anything, except get in your hair. o—— a— Clifton Webb, the actor Is HI. which is not surprising to bear after bis role as baby-sitter. Something la lacking In atmow pherertor=«a difficult io believe that the street fair will open next week. Possibly, it’s too early for a fair and since we haven't bad mmh summer weather, the tradl tional exposition which used to be associated with the harvest season. doesn't blend with late July. This will be the last year for the fair on city streets and from what is heard along the main stem, many will give an enthusiastic good-bye to the tented city and midway. Tastes in entertainment change with the times. - - ■ _ ——O - -Sb- ■ .. ' A trick of the North Korean Communists is' to compel captur-; cd American soldiers to. broadcast talks asking O.f's not to confTnue the war We doubt if our troops fair for surb Chicanery TW PW“« ’ evidently have little choice In the '"jat I oft. ,1m ' ■ brutally treated or possibly Any outfit charged with shooting' , helplege men In the face a ill do jjnost anything and ' ths North . iKpreSns seem to be about savage a lot. as found any where Soiuc A . • in* win even ■ the'score for this -dastardly act against their. h,«o .r oN ■ A noble woman who made her mark in the World through serv-. Ice to rii jnkind Is dead .S" |h .. io ...K--W.- • Ifc.aassv" rWipinander id ,th» Salvation Army , \_ahd ly-islr- > • n, ral 'A " . lt<,,. > b'U’.dcjl •!, i rt.,i iz r. ■ h England it Bbe was a spunk y at><l ,*i w<> ■ who waw r•- ifraid t - flgh- I. .! the • W"*#v h.tp of th. slur, J. who , benefited by b' tat -•■■ >u * cailwd h* r ih.'ti •« v M in’.' •. • '<■ - ■ I i ■ ‘ TSfh Ui*th<L<y »i;nUrr**ry. r«iht \ re£rt< MN I \i • n’t hr<* -*• a u •<> G J 4n.hh-.iM; tnr i H. ar’- ilk? th t . . ' 4 -
Injections Helpful In Treating Typertension
By H. R. M.O. - !• I pt* .<4 11*-. i« ofi.* •>( the Htwet ;>T» ' life ju>bkm« a -«H- < Wt.sh«* f Mi»]ar<* hep, <r Tvmpli'Trfrtvh tm rt -iK !r*»m it oj> h ’h» ( h» *r* .'"Mt**! *nd I. n» > ,!t * ■; - •ttrft-h r *— •' Hu if • hi .* .h • • M* .1 _ Tin.* < ; h> in - . * i-- ■ ’ ■- u r » <!• ■'■i-•>»’ ’ - ■*• ; ula: ■ • ■) HhIV the pt*tu»'trv *h« h« • th* btair .*rt< th* »dr» j l*w < . d Ju* • • - be a .-f;»«'!«»» s’ ♦ 1 • ■ - T - Bh* n* >■_»■'-• •'ST* : . • * i •’»*<” < nrt f ‘- ; ’ ■ ■ 4’ *» < at* B. ” - '<■ ‘ ' J * w>r*- -hsli’td by > ifoft* f rf xtnv*’ fr-.-’f - gland a»;d ‘ : ’Vi ' tract .■•!'» •* tr <h rl’rect to b* iK«d •* «' -4 bt''no* fits th* *paTi*fi' in-’itnun' Th* pi!thtar\ • era ’ *»• - ■ ! rjrh * ur»>*kiy b* i»- ; ’bin ui ■’• ■ k.” ’*h» pa- <• ti * • ■ S‘4* a reducing diet tnd n" . ? - ;=•’ «.itht H<*»* v« r K **'•* • ' Pd that the ’* -. •! redu' t tail th '' ‘ ■' • • trv.m the V-»f * < mint was flopped tb» u ■» *• « * Kara n »>. ■ _ . I <•(•* r<— »>’« h « ’ rr.xmw . Hi ihcee p»Hent» >' '•'>».-houglij thM t*»«“ ft** l * M*** pr»'.««r- • ■ «»•- ’•• ■. ' ‘ y ji > aud; ’ ' ' • ' ‘ •**?* ** *■ ■**■. *•' ‘
Moscow's newspaper. Pravda, prints untruths about Americana and thia country’s position in relation to the Korean war; Merely a propaganda sheet tor the Kremlin. Pravda tries to tell its readers that the United States Will not support the President in his stand against the Communists. Httler make tha same mlstake hy telling his people that American planes never would fly over Berlin. . -O —-o —- The senate's foreign relations committee discredits a fellow member, Srnator Joe McCarthy of Wisconsin, for maklnv charges of communism against certain state department employes. The sub-committee's report brands the McCarthy Investigation a "fraud and hoax. ’ Those are strong terms for a senate committee to use, but after four mouth's investigation the record does not showthat McCarthy proved any of bis charges. His vicUtM .denied anjrommunistl, affiliation or overt acts and i: -is tij,the shanir of th, ,Wi*-i<*n«ii: senator ttia! lie ...tiled, . Jen.j_hu'b. .‘.C iimiiunlsl That -a '*WW?»vte'n<l nn < m ■ e -,t? ' tn h> hraftded a Red tnerflv for* the sak. ~f politics. The voinfliiri->* n’port shows that M>Carthy e gun backfired o—. —o Th-■ old • Ct.iral i nttmt. -w ,1 ■ have final say in the election of a I’t 1 -i,|. i’.»” >d the I’hlted* Stat. > ■Congress ,has voted against sub-, loittini 1 > .;nsittutlonal atiietid-rr.-i.r to the people, so the old o-:nu of presld.ntial eleetors w arirrlirr-ynipuTar Tiff/* ~ i - ■ W mu.'. (0 ’ ’’ I’ 1 bt- opftoM tl tn »he pro aui«-KiliiM nr thv MH* bt fnj: dT:<iH» nd’d hall'-* "Wa* l»» »n . t’j' At»fdf> vtit.' dlr*' ? for • '•vi'f Mbn? Th- •♦!»<’"tai < H w.hi> h w i- • stablMi* <T 1 srs f»««> i« n final <l»< iMon with—r> W prf.pi.- art •• tl -ft.p- ahrud <-.f <’»lt | ■ .-..Uc ■ ' '
tlu.4u M.iun Os \ r„X : <»v. r ■ ! h «»<• i4and r»sMn^ - \Mm»u! ♦r. n •: •!«•' r< )»-n’ • -vmte ■ ■•! and •<,. A , ;t n:-4rkrd e •;><. . <n pr*-'Ur» n«» ■ fur’h* ! •:.!•.-• K i. p *li* b ■ - <l»- ». its; t.» v.»»; to “ . ’ ’ •■’ d« <>i> ' - ■<» -•■<.'• • I ’ -a. .r A i-r. i• .» u‘ •. t <!■ •.;. Ir Hje- t. <w.d }H»—Jj/x and . 1 . i . fy 1'- .-•< » h, *<-r . >—r? 4•'• ■ !? .ft ’><4 ' •’ ttr... f,:r» f ./ a ■ . ' 7-' - ■ QUESTION®.! *HO ANSWERS 'Kn’t: ■. . ■ ■ ■! »»' i, -» • • -Tj, i-- •iv • - ;n’. i» :: U h-s-. fpi*“ atlse* and H : •:» : -• • si - ’ p h ..• • •<■ .. have »■ r- u ?hi* ‘ • • i<<n. ih» p.i ;• nt h i *:• ■* ■- - f‘: < - I 1 ■ X ■» <\ * B. ( ’ ‘f tj . f ->*l» -li-s ’l us t: •’ ‘ • BA * » | . . . .
WAKE UPHT MAY BE LATER THAN YOU THINK! Q/' - ■ ■ ”.1 ' ■ s
A.- 01 | 20 YUKS TODAY o —i 1 . . i July 19 Another heat wavs hits Decatur and- the mercury shoots up to l»o thia afternoon. Senator Walsh of Massachusetts offer* a resolution favoring - stronger navy.’ Mr and Mi-. -J 'A. jKalvgr and I'.t-nry NeifeUe - return from a via-, it In Chicago ’ The Decatur Cojjiniotlore* pre rent the Rev. Joseph Hessian with < gold, wutch, • The ri»l.tdelphill Athletics re, gain tlrstz place in the Ain.tit an 'capiic ’ a- -- stork market* continue to ditrading hits a low..mark. . ~ - -..a- - a® Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE U ._ 0 ■■■ ■ . r Q. 1« anyrbing at all written on r ‘the iim«r -• i‘nr-I.isiim trtnr '<■ jna.l wedding invitation?' | A. Only, the riainea of those t<> Whom yon it® jnaiilhß the ."iiiMsl ration no address This envelop® ; * .... . ■ ...
‘_4 .. .Xv ..M ..J_.- — ‘ .-—■: w. = »-----r-|> . lax r-v gs Atvhnfi <..,»*• >*• ►. *«. *k»*> - .KIA z__■/ - --- - • rt - - '--- - • . 9.
- i—— 1..- s r .I CHAFTKi: SEVENTEEN THOSE cluuiKs* Ui« vairicy people Had t»«reo acre beginning. Fust, a woman puking rags in tne shed ana Anme WUsen £A all wwea. men. the young fellow, the doctor from oul«i>h*. come to work in the milk In denim. Uke the rest ot them, except-that ma wu ncw.-CUltA'rt bad put him at the digester. The fellow wiu shui> t mouthed about why ne had .left hns doctoring to do it. No one knew. The evening after Annie Wilson’a call. Eliza aake<|, ■ Who la’ Annie Wilson. Hespeth?" "IRspeth appeared to be enng whether she w6uki answer that or not. Then she said. "She was born and raised here. As nice and pretty a girl as ever there waa. Taught the achooi-for a year. Then she and young Robert, your father, fed tn love I woukin’t say there of it. between .them butjt was bo that they were in love—everyone knew. Everyone saw it fitting. Old Elisha looked on her tike she was a daughter/ She came and Went here a|; the house, like she was Then young Robert went off -*twas hta father s idea he should sec something of the outside—and be come bac k with—your mother.* Elisa Baid: "Hespeth you took rare of me sometimes, when 1 was little, didnT-you? Bidn’t you make some dolls for me out of clothespins?* Her voice, her eyes, begged 11’ ?'»h to say„. it was B•>. "Tlie firwt morning I *m here-* I looked Into that old cupboard up in my room that I played house in. I had a Michael and Matilda and the dolls.you made were the children.* "So you do remember." put in Hesfw th. warmly. "I doubted you would! Tea, I made tho*e dolls* Yo*i were at*e<i with, the *?Vhere are they, Hcspeth?" TJ put all the truck that was in that cupboard in a box after your mother went Otj with you. It perished your grandfather to sec it ‘rounds Th* box's been up in the attic ever since.* "I'm goinz to get It’* "Seems *sif tomorrow’s time en< 'Ugh.* • "No. no, tonight" Eliza was at the door. "Then I’ll fetch It down. The at6'’’s all In Wdi r and you’d make a htt»r of things, hunting it* Eliza, was the young one again, ' from the way Hc s p eTh spoke. "Bring it to my I w ant- to put it .ail back iw the cupt*»ard " i Hsspem,jlrought the box' to Eliza • room, and stood wat« hi'ng. while Elz* d< Ah on tier Knees, •801 l •■ft ’ • hi. ' ■ "H-re i-hry all e rr4ed. g : ‘ - l • r'. ' ■ <-•<.. ,t dust? oc uu,"
DBCATU* DAH.Y DEMOOUT, OTCATUE, INDIANA
lls then placed In the second, or 1 outer, envelope which fa sealed I and addressed. Q. When Introducing a relative. Is it proper to use the possessive 1 pronoun and mention the relationship? A. Ye*, this is perfectly proper ‘One may say, - '‘My father, my mother, my sister, my uncle.** M. If a divorcee retains her hus- i band's surname. ..bow should she l>e k»->wti? —• jA' Bydier given name, her family name and her married name, as, Mrs. .Mary Blown Williams.'' X . — J Household Scrapbook 1 By ROBERTA L.CK Testing Ham nmnitiv .l < lean knife into !ha los<\.to the renter Itnu< kle H’ht-Ttnnn’ is Cnod if the knife .< nt u'Ai'i*! at 1 -'. st*, but. Is not. [ fit for rating if the knife is smear and baa strong odor. Wicker Furniture Sal! not, onlv -makes a *uhm! < f»»r- wh ki » ruitii’Ht- i-u’ I ■; also—prw« nt» * * !»• (unitng yellow. Make a strong so-
. ► "Hcres'the furniture! At ieail I playcii’ that it was furniture, didn’t I ?" ’That square of wood was your stove." ■ "And someone made these beds out bt pieces of wood —was it yoy. Hcspth?" " ’Twas your grandfather. I can set him now, sitting out on the back step, whittling." Suddenly Elisa put one hand ever nor eyes; the other stayed around the doll Michael. Hespeth thought she was crydnßSh«? had to blink something that might have tc.eg tears out of ner own eyes. But Eliza lifted a dry face. It 'wasn’t In Hcspeth’s vocabulary to expresp the yearling that swelled in her breast. She said what she knew to say with some brusquenesa. "Y<»u re tired. You leave those things In the twdl Xri tomorrow and get to bed.* She went to the bed. turned down the covers, fattened up the pillows with a vigorous shaking. "There—? it’s ready for you. I'll heat some milk and bring it up. -You’ll sleep good, then* It was different,'the next day, between them. ”H- ; ■ th, I ra going to rat my brrakf;u>t xith you, hue in U.c k.t» hen!* '"Well. If so you want It* ’’Lunch and supper,-too.* "Saves steps," said Hrupeth. There was a companionable note in each one s voice. •- • • For Marilyn Streeter everything was motft agreeably different John was but of the house the day long and when he wax home he did not go around with that look of waiting no -hat he might jump down her throat She had her party to plan for, tbo a and that was exciting.. Bhe wrote a little note.of invitation to Jeremy Penny, her face twjsted mto a grimace as she wrote It x )ne to Chris Cameron with the same expression. One to George, considerably warmer in its word mg. She entrusted them to Pete Io deliver. "They’re invitations to l little party I am giving for Mias Forrestal,” she toM Pete, so that those natives would know it by cvcr.ing. She cleaned every rnmer of the hous«'- If it rained, that evening they’d have to eat inside and no one was going to see ft dirty. Every -day she watched for Oorge Culbert to pass. She saw him once and u ran to the steps but he only uaved a hand at her and went on by. Enaaxailed her on the telephone and asfcedbfT tn drive to Cranford wrtjijMr and* that was proof that fl -. v w/r* r. rg I- be "Lke Mar.i’r r lUf twe taffsra® —« -t— ' - ...tv 1 ■ •> ’
ution of salt water and wash all the wicker furniture. Rayan Qarmsnts po not bang rayon cannents on ths Mas on a wMy Bay. as a Uc* wind to bard on them. The People’s Voice Tbia column tor the ana at mt ruadara who wlab to maha «W fnrtloM tor the aeMral Beat ar dlacaaa «aaatiaaa as totarart. Plaaaa ala* /oar aaaaa to abaw aatbeaUrtty. It wIU -art ba aaad M ywa prator that M aot bat - ■ ■ Appreciation — • Decatur Daily Democrat: Gentlemen: We wish to express our appreciation for your cooperation In maklna the community dally vaerttoa Bible school such a huge anecaaa. We do not hnow of another newspaper In America that cooperates with the churches like the Decatur Democrat. ...... J With sincere thanks. *e remain. Church of God , Decatur. Ind. Bov. A Meo. DwipM R. McCurdy, pastors Infant Girl Dies ~~— In Fall From Bed South Bend, Ind. July 19 -dTi —Tragedy still was eith the Lyl* Bunlz family of lathkliig. Mich. today Their home was destroyed hr fire la«t Saturday only 19 minute* 'after they left on a, vacation trip here tn visit Mrs. Hunts's sister Mr John Nyka. y Yeklrt.lay tbeir six month-old daughter I.oretta died after a fall from a !**-d tn the Nvka.home Charles Johnson Is :En|isted In- U. S. Navy I i'll., . - , ■ , d it the I ■ ,„«■ rhe .silt <••,.' r.'jral train mg <■ ■■ *' '' - 11,- »,T up f;> a 'ifajiiiwr** -nW- •' live f' •• Waym recruiting ■ . ■ ■ : I. .1 the -,r-n ~r ouNr.t ip,.Our high I «<-hool Hr* <u'i«( rm nt. rsitr* to* tour ,-ar* Trade in a Gooo town — Oecatur
■HBBMMSSSaMMMMWMMmi■W. - t -.1.. ■ ■ !, they dreye tpjCranforr! the next day. Ehta suggeaUd that fxlore r <.I - y negaa their anopping they nave liinch in tt>< Cranford Arma , Mapiyn told John, later, "We ate >, the dellar and n naif lunch. John: She insisted mat I was her.xucsU > Anyway, she’d taken me along to t advise her on what she should buy, so I guess 1 had a good lunet 1 coming to me:" 1 She went on. her Solee high with m»rr ng- "She really doesn’t . know ho«p about clothes: She t says sues never given them any r thoughL U I had her money! We t «> ni into the bank before lunch and the cashed a check for three • hundred dollara. But she turned t down a perfectly atunnmg dreaa—--1 said aha wouldn’t feel herself in e anything so fussy and she went j and got the plamesl thing—not i .that t m sorry! My new dress will e look much smnrt.r. next to the r one she bought... What are you > snuling tike that at?" "You. ki<l" And with the smile r still on hU lipa he went into tus ;> office. Marilyn mn Into the bedroom. , She’d take a minute before ahe started supper to look at her new r dreaa. < t Back in the kitchen she went over her day in happy retrospect. There were some things she wasn’t going to tell John! Those things about herself she d made up—she t really hadn't meant to pul • Irwirding school Into It but. somehow. i» had come In. That was ; aft r Eliza’d said she’d only gone i to private schools. "Tell her that ; I went to work when I was fifteen t in a five-and-dtme ? Untr! She had elaborated, in an tetri ticks aha considered, am John's background, too. “His family goes way back - Hutch, you know, one r of the first to settle along the > H'. Ison. Owned,.acres and‘acres. I They've still got a lot of their money.. JohnJl pome Into tt when t his mother then But he won't take.,, . a penny now. And I think that is • splendid of him. don't you?" f She made the Uttle speech she j had prepared la explanation of i John’s going Into the mill “John t thought he was getting soft, you f sreT Needed to do some good hard work. George—l call him George, - I know him so well—gave him the Joh Just to please ma George's a > per fed dear, don't you think?” Elian- laughed. "I haven't r thought!" f "Weil, you'll find out he la And t compared to Chris Cameron <•." 1 She a-ould have like to go on enlarging on the comparison but ■ Eliza had sard, in a funny, quick I way. "Robert Frost — haar. t he I wr tten poems about New Hamp- ' 'z- p- pie? Let's go into fl book. ’ , X re wh lie v e re :h Grantor-1" fTo Bt Contmeß/ <
II I 1 H H i OOWON DUN. 44-yoar-old ato lomey fr.an Vtota. CJrt. Waves tha I White H-mat after be«< named Atomic Energy eomavtaama <*«rman by I rcsi-ient Truman. Dsaal la a Navy eomhat veteran and wan aaalatant to Supreme Court Jurtmw ■ Robert Jackann at the Nuernberg tnala He waa crmßrnred aa AEC member m Juae. (/sterwrtmeaU j W You Have Something To Sell' Try A Democrat Want Ad—lt Raya ' LOANS WouM n cash loan of >25 or moee help you? If an, ypu can borrow lhe money from un on your own rugnaturo. No delay. You can get a loan from us to pa y debts end the extra money . you may need. Ebons privately made in amounts up to >3OO 00. Y'rti can borrow from u* on your note, furniture, etc. without any one knowing about it. f arfl, pKvnr, vritr LOCAL I.MN COMPANY InßSfßDralH CfmnO Flmt • Bfoa Mm teMlwfl . Phaue 2'3-7 . OICMUn. INOtANA
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN JEREMY PENNY lived with the Abeia across I rum the school, in a small room under the bavea ’M ceiling so low she could touch It without stretching ner arms There ana one window, round, much like a peephole and so placed u> Lne peak of the gable that she oouKl see out ot it only when sne was standing up There was s narrow bed. a pine OufMp a pine cable and a aard pine cnair. But oare and uninviting aa it waa. K eras exactly as Jeremy wanted It. - AU through childhood one nad adored Roland, ner older brother by fifteen yearn Their mother bad died whea she was five, their lather a year later, end they nau gone Co uve with their Aunt Fran< es in- Rochester. And beginning then. Roland nad talked of. someday, finding a noust where just the two ot them would Mve together. The drcam ot it had grown ns she grew: Roland, enting nia mystery stones and she, grown up. eoekmg the things he liked, looking after him, typing bis Uianuscripta. Two yrara ago. on one of his trips to New York to see bis publishers, ne nad foufid the -Souse, outside Great Neck. Izing island. They had moved into it, and Jeremy had thought Heaven could offer no more of bliss than was hers, settling new and old furniture. planning, marketing, cooking. They would live there always, and always... » Then one evening Roland had said to her, ‘1 in going to marry SVianya Crea. Jeremy. Ynutl have two of us now to lake care o(." But she wouldn't. She would not live with them, not a day. not an hour! She had bated Zhanya Crea. even before she met her. Roland, for jdoing this to ner, ,W>e would go as tar away from the world they were in as she could ga She would—not —take a penny ,f joni ’ Roland so she pad to do something to support herself. Reading in a newspaper of the . critical shortage ot teachers in New Hampshire, she had applied to the State Board tor a position and nad been assigned to the grade dcliool ill New Interval That she gated teaching made it more the tl.ing she should do. -. . She had come to the valley, to the room under Mary Abel’s roof, and had settled down to a life dedicated to unhappiness She was twenty-one years old. looked older than-that. with her thin, tight face, an i at the same time, younger. She did nu re' Marilyn's invitation fr m Pete im.t',l the afternoon before the day ot the party tor the reascai that she had not g. ne into the store, dhe shrank from asking tor niail. Knowing that the :«>nly. lettets she would get »,• ,:<i be >-r.~ Roland ! Though! m.- tai leUd I. i he must think I i ut 'jer a, lead, be wrote to her'
Mrs. Holycross Dios At Columbia City Word- wae- received here today by Mr. and Mrs. Don Jeffries of thia city of the death of Mfa. Fraa<la Holycroea. 49. at Columbia City Tuesday algbl. Mre. Holycroes.. whose husband la principal of the Larwill school*, had visited th* Jeffries in Decatur oa many occa sioaa aad was will hnowa bars Death reaulted from cancer.
IcDcr | IB Km El matortais seed. Maae or write today. a "AM Rooms Worm with WmiornsM Fornaco” ri« Sr ryw eee<a»~« •*••* •••» <“« U "' “*■ ««<wo-C>or W«*e»/. fa*. A tomato tor aay tert WMtomeea Caat Pereeeee WlHlomsea OS toraeees aemilliMfW Mart to Itomr. Cert-« FaMtosea asaaaad AM M * Htatitof A IW'VVRSsOSfIIRBi r fcl la a!* I *‘ d It KM " **’ h *in * ■’*** J - B. J. FEASEL PAINT & WALLPAPER STORE ?70 N.2nd St. Decatur. Ind.
now and then, and tn tach Meter > as though ba were only amused by i me attitude ane'd taken. Oboe he'd i wrtttao. "Snap out M your peeve, : Sis— you've u» muck aaaoet" A i peeve/ She alwaya waa ewb tas > days after one ot ma “iettera. Sbe read Marilyn's nota, tore If I up. She wouldn't g% of course, i She wasn't interested la meeting < mis Elixa ForrestaL in meeting i aayonOL She'd eend an answer to > Mra. Streeter by one of the chlli Oren, the next day. She wrote K la her noon hour I on Tuesday. "I regret mat it la r impnealMe foe see to accept your - kind lavitaUoa. Jeremy Penny." She ate ner lunch, started out I to return to the achooi. the note - la bee pocket. Crossing the road I she met Chris Cameron. I "Grand day. laal It, Mies i Fanny?" "Yea, B la." Though she hadn't I noticed that It was. Ono day was like another. "Too nice a day to epend tn ' sehool !" —: "Tea. tt tai" ehe repeated, over her shoulder, bar she had walked past him. "Oh. just a moment. Mias Penny." She turned, unwillingly. "You're Invited to Mrs. StreetePs supper party—snll you let me stop for you ?" The unexpectedness ot It. the directness of It and Chris’ friendly! smite combined to throw Jeremy* into utter confusion. Her blood rushed up Into her throat, closing It. She got out a stammered, Thank you." but no more. “Fine," declared Chris Cameron with pleasant heartuieaa ’Kixthirty'sthe hour, isn’t tt? I'll stop quarter after. And thanks for saying 1 may."\ He walked on then, and Jeremy went acreea to\the schoolhouse, her knees thaking\undcr her. the tightness still in her throaL Ehza dressed for the\party with some dread and sotne anticipation. The latter she did not Kalyse. but the first was familiar—a leftoyer from her mother's parties and her mother's chiding glances, her jn other saying afterwards. “Couldn't you have been a little more alive, darling ? 1 wanted that new man to tike you and you were srooden tonight!" Bhe never had had a party of her own. Now and then her moth< r bad suggested that she Invite some young people la but she hadn't—there had been no one she i cared enough about to invite. i He ape th stood in the door, i watching the progress of her toilet. 1 every now and then nodding her ' head in approval Elisa put on tne I new dress. | 'That color suits you," said ■ Hespeth. ) "I've worn green more than any 1 othr-r color. I think." Eliza was i but ton.ng the dress and sixMenlv i her fingrrs were stilt She bad
WEDNESDAY. JULY 19. 1959
Eastern Star services will be hold tor Mr*. Holycroea at tbe Smith funeral home to Columbia City Thursday night aad regular eerrieew wttl be- heM Frtoay attec-... noon -at 2 o'clock. Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrie* will attaad both services. Trade In a Goad Town — Oecotur Ambmml July StorcwMe Clearance Sale to n«»w in progreM.—E. F. Gaea State. B !>Tt4
’ worn aa oM Jersey dress of a>- ’ murt that aanie shade ot green I Uom days ic AllamunU Fetor Bad , asked ber to wear it. Her uuunct was to take the,. ' garment ofi. She put oer band to the top button, men dropped tt. I That was over—nothing at it could reach her, sere in New Interval. "Who'i going to be at your party T" queried Heapeth. "The girl who toacbes the echooi here and George Culbert. Doctor Streeter, at course, and Marilyn ...and Mr. Cameron." Hsapem said. "Wall, you look ail right." and went away from the door. “LtTt fit ts Io I better et«t, east IBM." Tonight she and Chris Cameron would meet again—Uns would bo the next time... “Why, you dislike Mm Intensely!" She cried H aloud, with indignant pooltlvenraa. to the girl before her. But she saw me color flame high oa tboee obeeks la the mirror. CeMkrO* miMi An * hr. V'Wtcwrw ww KSllllty up to drive her down to the party. Hespeth did not approve ot that. "DoaY see any need of Mat to coma Tou've your car." "He has a letter* ho wants one tc read. He forgot to give tt to me this afternoon when I waa at the office." That Elin should offer this exI planation, halt apologetically, was 1 significant of the new relationship between them. It eould wait "til tomorrow," observed Hespeth darkly. It could, of course. Elisa had not thought of that. George Cub bert bad come out to the car Jud! as she was about to drive out of the mill yard. -Oh. Mias Forrestal, Tve a letter you should read. It slipped my mind until this moment. How about Wtlng me drive up for you and take you down to the Streeters'? I'U bring the letter along with me." lie was a Jlttle late in Coming and profuse In his apologies He came into me hall, went on. without any Invitation, tnto the study, at the same time taking ao envelope from his pocket. "I remembered to bring this—want to reed it?" Elisa took the letter but she put It down on the desk. “I don't think we should keep Marilyn waiting." "Marilyn, ta It. as soon ax this? Well, If we rant keep her waiting, read it tn the morning. It's from the BSndley outfit—the big paper nuns down tn the State. Thew're angling to buy up the valley, here." He laughed at her pussled look. "FU explain R all to you tomorrow. Never mix business with pleasure w my motto. This your coat ?" He nodded toward the light coat Eliza had put ovef a chair. "Allow me!" He held tt for her. his hands lingerutg for a moms at oa her shoulders z fTo to CoateaueO 4 *f/
