Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 104, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 August 1925 — Page 12

12

GLORIA'S 1 '

THE STORY SO FAR Gloria Gordon, 20 and pretty, marries Dick Gregory, thinking: he has money. Her idea of ideal marriage is plenty of fun and clothes. . . . -• but no children ! When Dick tells Gloria she must do her own housework. Bhe has hysterics. So Dick borrows Maggie, his mother's maid, to teach Gloria to cook. But Gloria won’t try to learn. Stanley Waybum. an actor whom Gloria once loved, calls on her. Dick sees him leave. Gloria tells her husband he was only an interior decorator. Dick becomes ill. When he's better Miss Briggs his secretary, comes to the house to do her work. While they are busy, Gloria plans a housewarming. She invites Waybum. When Dick sees the actor, he recognizes him. Dick realizes that Gloria lied to him. Gloria recklessly drinks too much when- she sees Waybum kissing Myra Gail. She faints away in the arms of Dr. John Seymour, whose wife. May. is in love with Jim Carewe. The party breaks up when Lola Hough ’’bawls" out Bill, her husband, for ‘‘petting" with May Seymour. Maggie, disgusted, leaves. And Dick gets breakfast next morning. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY By Beatrice Burton CHAPTER X '[ -"J1 OU didn’t know I was a reguIY j lar cook, did you?” Dick ' x ‘ grinned. ‘T certainly did not!” Gloria laughed. “But isn’t it nice for me .hat I married one. . . . Let’s see ivhat you’ve got ready for me, chef!” Dick set the tray down on the bedside table. On It was a plate of sugary rolls that Maggie had baked :he day before, a silver dish filled pith butter balls, and the steaming ;offee. “I made the coffee,” Dick said, ‘and believe me, it’s some brew . . . itrong enough to float an egg!” “Where did you ever learn to make soffee?” Glory idly asked. Asa matter of fact, she didn’t care where Dick had learned. The great thing ivas that he had made it! “On camping trips when I was a kid,” answered Dick. He put his urm around his wife and drew her down into his lap. "I can broil bacon and fish and fry potatoes, too,” he said proudly. “Honestly, Glory, cooking isn’t hard work. .. I wish you’d try it. I’d love to see you In a white apron fussing around the kitchen. . . Instantly Glory’s good humor vanished. “Oh, I don’t doubt that you would!” she cried. “You'd love to see me flying around with a mop and a scrubbing brush, too! You’d he crazy about seeing me with my nails broken and my hair flying amd my face haggard like Lola Hough’s, wouldn’t you? . . . Well, you never will, Mr. Man! Because I’ll never e a slave for you or anybody else! . . . And anew maid comes into this house today or I walk out of it'. See?” She jumped up from Dick’s knees. She threw herself face downward on her bed and burst Into angry tears. "Now don’t start that hysterical stuff!” Dick pleaded. There was fear In his voice ... a man’s fear of a woman’s tears. “I didn’t say you couldn’t have a housemaid, sweetkins,” he went on gently. “If It takes every cent I have you shall have one . . . but I guess every man dreams of seeing his wife doing little jobs around the home he’s made for her. . . . What’s marriage any way, but the joy of a man and a woman building a nest for the children they hope to have?” • • • G ,,- l DORY sat up suddenly and put her arms around Dick's ■ neck. tine leaned back and let her brilliant eyes rest in his. "Is that what marriage means to you, Rikky-Tikky-Tavy?” she asked. “Doesn’t it mean me? . . . Doesn’t it mean love and thrills, too, to you . . . just a little bit?” She took his head between her hands and kissed him on his forehead. Dick held her close. “You know you’re the only thing to me,” he said solemnly. “You know you held my whole life jn the palm of one of your hands. . . . And it’s because I do love you that I want this house to be a home for both of us . . . and after awhile, for our babies.” . t . Glory said nothing at all. • • * The telephone rang. Gloria jumped up to answer It. “Yes?” she said. Stanley Wayburn's voice came to her over the wire! “Well . . . how's my Russet this morning?” he said. “Very well,' Glory answered stiffly. She knew that Dick was listening. ‘ Have you forgiven me for playing around with your friend, Myra?” Stan asked. "Or are you still greeneyed about It?” Gloria knew that she couldn’t answer that question, with Dick right there In the room. And she could feel an uncomfortable flush spreading Itself over her face and neck. . . . At that moment she wished Stanley Wayburn on the other side of the world. "When am I going to see you again?” Stan’s voice asked after a long Interval.

Puzzle a Day

& •a

This is a West Virginia coal miner’s puzzle. He claims that he can arrange these nineteen lumps of coal so that they will form nine straight rows of five lumps each. In what fashion will this miner arrange the lumps of coal to get this result? Last puzzle answer; There are 288 cow testing stations In our eastern section, 252 stations in the southern section, and 192 stations in western United States, making a total of 732 stations. Also 14 plus 288 equals 4032; 16 plus 252 equals 4032, and 21 plus 192 equals 4032, proves the answer correct.

Still Gloria made no answer. She actually shook T/ith fright. Then Stan apparently had a flash of understanding. ”... What's the matter? Why you talk? Hubby still at hotne?” he asked. “Yes!” Glory could answer that. She heard the click of a receiver In her ear. Waybum had hung up. * * • [TITT] HO was that on the telIV I e P hone ?” Dick asked careL... i J lessly. He did not look at her. He stood by the chiffonier, lighting a cigaret. “One ... of ... my friends,” Gloria stammered. “Who?” “Does it matter?” Glory asked. “It matters very much •. . . .to me,” Dick said. He came toward her. ' “It was Wayburn, wasn't It?” he asked. Gloria threw back her head defiantly. “Well, what if it was?*,’ she asked. “What’s so terrible wrong about his calling me up to thank me for the good time he had here last night? That’s only common politeness , . . for him to do that!” She poured herself a second cup of Dick's coffee. Then she took a cigaret from the package he had left lying on the tray. She put it daintily between her lips. “Give me a light, Dick,” Glory said. He came toward her. But Instead of lighting her cigaret he pulled it from her mouth.' Violently he threw it into the waste basket. “How long have you had that rotten habit?” he asked. “Why, I’ve always smoked.... that is, for the last two or three years,’’ Glory said. "Didn’t you know that?” Dick shook his head. He smiled. But there was a sort of misery in his eyes. “I guess there are a lot of things about you that I don’t know,” he said. “For instance, I never knew you had a taste for liquor... .until last night.” • • * LORY laughed. Her face was as merry as a small girl’s. “Yes, yes, go on,” she begged. “Tell me all the other black traits of character that I’ve kept hidden from you for so 10ng!.... When I dsink It’s a crime. When you drink It’s a foolish act!... .When I smoke it’s a disgrace! When you smoke it ’rests your nerves!’.... But I can’t see where it’s any worse for women to do those things than for men!” The more she talked the angrier Glory became. She her small foot. “Here you are shut up In an office all day alone with that secretary of yours... .your Miss Briggs! How do I know that you're not making love to her right along?... .But if an old friend like Stan Wayburn happens to call me up and talk to me for five minutes, you throw a fit about it!” she stormed. "I tell you I wor't be treated this way....as if I vere a bad child! I’ll do Just as I please! And it will take more than you to stop me!” “Whew!” Dick said. “You’re quite some little spit-fire, Glory!” He pulled out his watch. “It’s nearly noon,” he said. “I think I’d better be starting for the office....We aren’t getting anywhere with this argument, anyway ” He started for the door. Then he wheeled suddenly and came back into the sunny room. From under her lashes Glory watched him. “If I asked you something, would you tell me the truth?” Dick asked. Glory pondered. “I might.” she said. She picked up a nail file and began to “point” her beautifully kept nails. ‘Well, then,” Dick began, “why did you never mention this fellow Wayburn, in all the months before we were married?” Glory shrugged her lace-covered shoulders. "/ • “Why should I have mentioned that I knew him?” she a3ked. “Is he so very Important?” • * * : : OW could she tell Dick the 11—II truth about Stan Wayburn? I i l How couldshe tell him that there had been a time when she would gladly have married Stan If he had asked her to . but that he had not asked her? . . . How could she tell him that there had been a night a year ago when she had cried for hours because Stan had left town without saying goodby to her? . . . That there had been

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weeks and weeks afterward when she had tried not even to think about Stan . . . much less talk about him? . . . And that even now when she was a married woman, he had only to look into her eyes to make her forget every one else In the world . . . even Dick himself? . . . How could she tell Dick that? She just couldn’t. . . . And anyway, It was none of his business! • • • Dick's voice broke in upon her thought. ‘You said last night that you’d had a sort of childish love affair with Wayburn,” he said. “Did you ever care for him as much as you do for me?” Glory drew a long breath. “No wonder you’re a good lawyer, Dick!” she said. “You can think up more questions to ask a person than anybody else In the world, I’ll bet! Yes, I did think a lot of Stan once upon a time....but It wasn't In the way I care for you.” She got up and walked over to the window. She did not want Dick to see her face. She felt as If all her thoughts were written on it for him to read. “Just how much do you care for me?” His voice was bitter. “You ought to kn0w....1 married you, didn’t I?” Glory aaked. She turned from the window and sat on the arm of Dick’s chair. She laid her cheek on his dark hair. She was just a bit afraid of Dick when he was in a suspicious mood like this.... Than she kissed him. That, she knew, was the surest way to remove all doubt of her from his mind! • • * | ■. , I OU see, Dick.” Glory went Y I on - “I knew, from the minI I ute I met vou. that you were going to be my husband. And In the same way I always knew that Stanley Wayburn and I were never going to be more than playmates ....A girl always sizes men up that way!” “And just how long were you and Wayburn .... playmates?” Dick asked. v “Oh, for two or three months last winter Just before I met you,” the girl answered. "Look here, Dick, I don’t cross-question you about every girl you ever were In love wtih before you married me? What are you trying to get at, asking me all these questions?” Glory laughed nervously. Dick turned in his chair and took her in a grip of iron. ' “I’ll tell you'what I’m trying to get at!” he said. “I'm trying to get at the truth about this Wayburn!

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With Maggie Gone, Dick Prepares Breakfast for Gloria and Himself.

....the man I saw leaving.... He was Wayburn, wasn’t he? You lied to me when you said he was a decorator from the furniture store, didn't you?” (To Be Continued) HUNTERS WILL SHOW INCREASE Boost Due Good Roads and More Automobiles. More than 15,000 non-resident hunting and fishing licenses will be sold in Indiana during the present year, George N. Mannfeld, State fish and game commissioner, predicted today. Last year the department of conservation sold 13,929 licenses, as compared with 3,867 in 1918. The heavy Increase Is attributable to good roads. Increase In the number of automobiles, better fishing and the fact that the non-resident license sells for only |l, according to Mannfeld. Nearly half of the nonresident licenses, figures show, are Issued In the lake counties of the northern portion of the State. Mannfeld reported a total of 198,200 fingerllng fish and 4,000 fry were planted during July In the waters of the State. Os this number 128,6P0 were black bass. During July, State wardens made 179 arrests for violation of the fish and game laws, from which 158 convictions were obtained. Fines and costs totaled $2,903.20. BURIAL AT PRINCETON Funoral Services Are Held for Mrs. Sarah P. Dorsey. The body of Mrs. Sarah P. Dorsey, 86, who died Saturday at her home. 111 E. Sixteenth St., was taken today to Princeton where funeral services were to be held this afternoon at the home of her son, Dr. W. T. Dorsey. Mrs. Dorsey, who had been a life-long resident of Indiana, had spent the last five years with her daughter, Martha W. Dorsey. She was a member of the First Presbyterian church. Her son and daughter are the only survivors.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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MONDAY, AUG. 31,1925

Gordon s 127-129 E. Washington St.

W. R. Beard & FURNITURE 463 EAST WASHINGTON ST.

Low Priced Quality Washer?

setting anew staward of value for quality construction at a low price. It embodies the best features of washers sellinp; at much higher prices. Its construtcion is of a type that every mechanic will approve for sturdiness, dependability and long life. And it washes clean regardless of whether it he work clothes or lingerie. The convenient terms and the short time required to completely pay for it, because of its low price, are also features to be taken into consideration. Drop in tomorrow and see it.