Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 137, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 October 1925 — Page 16
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LORIA f, 5I r
TIIK STDBY SO FARi GLORIA GORDON, beautiful flapper, marries DICK GREGORY, a stnurffunfr lawyer. Her idea of marriace is fun and fine clothe* . . . but no work or children. She refuses to cook and keep house. She hires RANGHILD SWANSON to do it for her. although Dick says they can’t afford a maid. And she swamps him with debtß for her clothes and an automobile. Gloria becomes Infatuated with STANLEY WAYBURN. an out-of-work actor. Her "tazr-y" friend. MAY SEYMOUR, wife of DR. JOHN SEYMOUR, warns her not to be seen with Wayburn. She tells Gloria how she, herself, has been snubbed because of her foolish affair with JIM CAREWE. Dick becomes seriously ill with pneumonia. Durintr the days of his slow recovery. Gloria sees a (treat deal of Wayburn. who makes violent love to her. He borrows S2OO of Dick's money from Gloria, and (roes to New York to bo leading man for SONYA CHOTEK.. a Russian actress. Dr. Seymour orders Dick away for a rest. His mother, who has been ill. also plans to go with him. But Gloria save that if MOTHER GREGORY goes, the won’t. Dick refuses to tell his mother that Gloria doesn’t want her with them. So Gloria stays at home , . . Just long enough to pack to go to New York, where her friend. KIT CAMERON. is on the stage. Gloria goes to see Wayburn. But he “turns her down” and tells her he has lust married Sonya Chotek. By Beatrice Burton CHAPTER XLIII LORIA took the news of Wayburn’s marriage as she might have taken the news of his death —standing very straight and still. Too hurt to cry! Too shocked to say a word! So he had married Sonya Chotek yesterday ... There vas a strained look in her eyes as she turned them from Sonya’s broken photograph to Wayburn’s face. They searched it as if it could tell her all she wanted to know. ,At last she found her voice. “How long have you been in love with her?” Wayburn smiled- "For quite a long time, if you must know,” he said. “Months.” 7t began to dawn upon Gloria that she hail been treated shamefully by Wayburn. He had made love to her when he had already been in love with Sonya Chotek. And he had arrowed money from her to follow Sonya Chotek here and marry her! Gloria groaned aloud! O, what a fool she had made of herself! For deep in her heart she had always known that Stan truly didn’t care about her.... Perhaps if she had scorned him, laughed at him, he would be on his knees to her still! For that was the way with men! They wanted most what they couldn't have! They spent their lives wishing for the moon. The fruit that hung highest on the tree....that was the fruit they craved. The woman who belonged to somebody else was the woman they desired above all other women! She had been too easy for Wayburn. She had always been at his beck and call, just as she was here now, this very minute! “You coward!” she flared up at him: “all the time you were telling me how crazy you were about me you knew you were going to marry another woman!... .Why, you’re nothing but a crook!” * * * * .Y t| AYBURN'S smile widened, yy “And all the time you were letting me make love to you, you w.re married to another man!” he s:Jd. “You were doing a little double-crossing, yourself, I’d say!” Gloria couldn’t find’a word to say. She knew that he was telling the truth . . . unvarnished, and unpleasant to listen to! “The wonder to me is that Gregory ever married you," Wayburn went on. “I can’t understand any man ever taking you seriously, Gloria. ... I never did, you know. Not for a minute. I had the lowdown on you right from the start. “The low-down on me?” Glo? la asked him, “what do you mean?” "Oh, I’d seen your kind of woman before. The world’s full of them,” Wayburn went on Insolently. "Lightweights . . . that’s the way men size you up! Dolls to play around with for a while. . . .” Gloria picked up her hat and be-
Puzzle a Day Mr. Barry could not buy a seat for the world series baseball games at the field, so he went to the ticket broker in his hotel. This man sold him two tickets for $lO each. But as the broker could not change the fifty-dollar bill Mr. Barry gave him, he gave i: to the hotel clerk who gave him five tens. Mr. Barry then received his change. The next day the hotel clerk returned the fifty-dollar bill to the broker, because it was counterfeit, and was given another fifty in its stead. What did the broker lose on the transaction? Last puzzle answer:
OF EXTRA T/LE& i —I t i—- — l_ _ _ i | i 1 i_ : b . | — 1 □.,11 I M l:l l Ll.l 1
The first square room was 15 feet by 15 feet and required 225 tiles; the second square room was 14 feet by 14 feet and required 196 tiles. (Each tile occupies 1 square foot.) 225 minus 196 equals 29 tiles, first room used more than second room. Count squares in illustration for proof, .arge square is first room or “A,” outlined square is second room qr "B." HEIJED HIS BOY Henry Duncan, Alpine, Alabama, writes: "My boy had a bad cough and cold. I read about FOLEY’S HONEY & TAR and after giving il to him & few days he was well. He had been having this cough for twi years, but FOLEY’S HONEY' <f TAR stopped it and made him well. Contains no opiates. Good for children and they like it. Get a bottle today from your druggist and it will be on hand to chock coughs and colds.— Advertisement.
gan to put it on. She didn’t have to stay here to be insulted any longer. Wayburn spoke again. ‘ You’re a member of the great sisterhood that takes everything and gives nothing in return,” he said. That stung Gloria to anger. "You say that! You!” she cried. “What have I ever taken from you, I’d like to know! Nothing but a lot of applesauce!’’ "I wasn't' talking about myself. I was speaking of your husband,” Wayburn said clearly. “You’ve never made him any decent return for. what he’s given you. Have you?” • • • LORIA had no feeling in her as she left Stanley Wayburn’s boarding house. She was so terribly hurt that she was numb to her own pain. She walked along block after block without knowing what she was doing. She stopped sometimes, to look into shop windows —but only because she had always loved to look into shop windows. It was after seven when she got back to her hotel. She walked past the open door of the dining-room. Her own room was dark. Without turning on *he lights, she flung herself down on the hard hotel bed. The best thing that could have happened would have been to cry herself to sleep. But she could neither cry nor sleep. An hour passed. She got up and undressed. Her movements were slow, and she moved without a sound. She felt as if the person she loved had died, and that the body w r as in the next room—just beyond the wall. She must be very still Toward morning she fell asleep. —• • • jry'r\HEN she awoke the sun was Vv hi&h----l J Gloria lay In bed trying to make up her mind whether to go home or go and hunt a job in New York. She looked into the mirror. Her face showed no sign of the strain she had been through. And Gloria was sure she had never been prettier In her whole life than she was that May morning, when she rang the doorbell of Kit Cameron’s apartments in Fifty-Ninth St. Kit was having breakfast in bed. She was in black satin pajamas. A green ribbon bended h3r hair that was like black satin above her black eyes. Her smoolh skin was the color of cream. "Why, it’s li’itle Glory Gordon!” she exclaimed, when the elderly maid led Gloria into the big, airy bedroom. “Bring another cup and some fresh coffee for Miss Gordon, please Elsie.” Then she turned to Gloria. “What in the world are you doing here?” she asked. “Hunting a job,” Gloria answered briefly. “A job! What do you want with a job?” Kit asked in surprise. "I thought you’d married a millionaire back home.” “So did I,” Gloria laughed. “But I got stung.” Kit took her hand sympathetically. “Poor Glory! You found out he didn't have one cent to rub up against another, I suppose,” she said. "That’s the way with fellows, nowadays.... They all look as if they have a bank account, and a house-boat at Palm Beach. But there's nothing to most of them but a line of talk and a fur overcoat that ain’t even paid for!.,..‘Buttonshoe boys’ I call ’em!’’ Gloria frowned a little. She didn’t want Kit to think that Dick was that kind of a man. Buttonshoe boy, indeed! "Oh, it wasn’t the money that made the trouble, Kit,” she said quickly. "We just didn’t hit It off. Don’t get it into your head that I married him for nothing but money. I thought I was pretty keen about him at first.” Kit sighed, as she sugared her grapefruit. "That’s the way with love. It wears out too soon,” she said. “A girl ought to marry for money.” “Only, it’s so hard to find,” she went on wistfully. "Most of these ‘heavy-sugar papas’ with real money are tied up to some hatchetfaced wife who’s hanging on to ’em like grim death!.... A girl has a hard time these days, especially in the show business.” The show business! Ah, now they were getting down to brass tacks! “Kit,” Gloria began. “I came to
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ask you to help me get a job on the stage. Do you suppose you could introduce me to Ginfeld?” Kit widened hei green eyes. “Well, you sure have your nerve!” she said. “Ginfeld's girls are supposed to be the best-looking girls in the world!” Gloria narrowed her eyes. Could it be that Kit didn’t think she was pretty enough for a Ginfeld chorus girl? “You used to say I was better looking than you, Kit,” she said at last. “I know. But I’m a type! Pure Spanisl)! Ginfeld says so,” Kit said with pride. “And . . . aren’t you getting the least bit too fat, dear?” She looked across the room into the mirror above the dressing-table. She ran a hand down her own exquisite flatness. "I'll tell you what!” she said suddenly. “I'm going down to the shop for rehearsal in a little while. I'll take you along. Glory. And if Ginfeld is there. I'll introduce you to him. That’s the best I can do for you. . . . And after all, some girls spend years Just trying to see Ginfeld.” Gloria was delighted. * * * SHE Gloria who walked into Herman Ginfelchs office was sure of her own charm. She was confident that Ginfeld would jump at the chance to put her in his chorus of beauties. “Let’s see,” Ginfeld began. "You’re the girl that Cameron told me about. Gloria Gordon?” “Yes,” Gloria answered, seating herself beside his desk. “Stand up,” he said sharply. Gloria stood. Ginfeld leaned back, and stuck his thumbs in the armholes of his vest. He looked her over fr:m head to foot. “Take off your hat,” he ordered. Gloria took it off, and shook her head to fluff out her hair. “Dance?” he asked. “Sing?” “A little of both, thanks,” Gloria answered. She knew that it was not dancing or singing, but her looks, that counted with Ginfeld! She waited breathlessly while he clapped a brown derby hat on his bald head, and stood up. He looked at her indifferently. “We're putting on a summer show pretty soon,” he said, after a moment. “If we can use you in it, I’ll let you know... .Thanks for coming in.” A summer show! A bum summer show!... .Gloria could have wept with disappointment. Her heart was as hea-.-y as a lump of lead. She knew that she had not made a “hit” with Ginfield! She knew that she would never be in the famous “Gayeties” chorus!.... That dre;: n was smashed forever!
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Gloria Meets Disappointment in Fer Search for a Stage Job.
She was ashamed to go out into the dusty hallway and face Kit, who was waiting there for her. “He didn’t want me,” she said hopelessly. “Don't take It too hard, Glory,” Kit comforted her. "You just don’t happen to be the type Ginfield wants. Try the other managers.” (To Be Continued) 13 DRIVERS ARE SLATED Only Two Are Charged With Speeding by Police. Thirteen auto drivers were slated at the city prison during the past twenty-four hours. Sam Young, 23, Sixty-Ninth St. Valley View Dr.; Levi Hictfs, 22, of 919 Drier Pi.; were charged with speeding. Calvin Toms, 32 colored, 753 Roache St.., was held on charged of driving while Intoxicated, reckless driving and driving on the left side of the street. George Poore, 33, of Anderson, Ind.; and William Prim, 39 colored, 1118 Fayette St., weie charged with driving while intoxicated. Raliegh Aubery, 35 of 425 E. Ohio St., was held on charged of failure to stop after an accident and -eckless driving. Seven drivers were charged with minor violations. ACHES AND PAINS ALL OVER BODY Mrs. Proctor Reports Great Benefit by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound “I recommend Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to all
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
suffering women. I have taken four bottles of it and I feel 100 per cent better. I was dizzy and weak with no appetite, no ambition and with a tired feeling all the time. had aches and pains all over
FINE WATCH REPAIRING Prices moderate for first-class work. EVARD 36 Monument Circle. Jewelers for Four Generations. FOUNTAIN PENS Wnterman. Schaeffer, Lifetime, Conklin, Moore. Dnofnld. New Improved Kverxharp Pencil*. Pens and Pencils Repaired CLARK & CADE fla>pool Drug Store We Make Halloween Costumes Wholesale and Retail. Mall Orders Given Prompt Attention. Send deposit. MARTIN BROS. J^M^^Mease!^^Bt^^leas^Yon (FURNITURE COMPANY I 414-18 E. Washington St. | Buy Your Furs From the manufacturer and save the retailer'* profit. Jacob Wohlfeld Fur Cos. 437 OCCIDENTAL BLDG. N P EW Lower Prices 110 S. Meridian St. & WINKLER Dentists S. W. Cor. Wash, and Penn. J— 1 ■ - Roofless Plates The splendid appreciation shown by the vast number of people for whom we have constructed roofless plates is indeed highly gratifying to us. The most enthusiastic are those who have discarded their old style plates. No more gagging or sick stomach. Perfect taste and speech. No rocking, sanitary. easily kept clean. It's the last word in artificial teeth. Eiteljorg & Moore Corner East Market and Circle Few (Steps From Circle Theater
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EVERYTHING FOR BIRDS yJV Bird Seed, 2 lbs. for V 25c. Bird Cages, Stands and Accessories. We I carry a splendid line Kv’" of Cages from *1.75 up. w Cage Stands, $3.35 up. w Everitt’s Seed Store I 437 W. Wash. 3 and 5 N. Ala. Bert Jaffa Lewis Jaffe Jktfflt' & cfond 7. N. Illinois St. PEARSON PIANO COMPANY I Indiana’s Largest and Most Com plete Music Store 138-130 N. Penn. Bt. Est. 1873 One Price to Everybody Men’s, Women’s and Children's OVERCOATS. DRESS COATS RAINCOATS AND TOPCOATS 1 CJOODYEAI® b I. ’The House of Coats’ I ’ 45 MONUMENT CIRCI.E In Circle Thcoter Bldg. NORMAN’S FURNITURE CO. “The Bluebird Store” 237-241 E. Wash. St. Diamonds, Watches and Jewelry on Credit Kay Jewelry Cos. 137 W. Washington St. Robertson’s I Indiana's Bed Known Music House Shop Here Save Money 235 N. Pennsylvania St. SMART APPAREr On Easy Terms FEDERAL CLOTHING STORES 131 W. Washington St. White Furniture Cos. Tom Quinn Jake Wolf Better Furniture Lowest Prices Personal Service 243-245-247-249 W. Washington St The Best Automobile Polish Is "GUARD OF LUSTRE" It Leave* a Dry Surface Gather* No Dust Circle 0531. SAM TRATTNER 141 S. Illinois jit. j!
ETo Increase the Hilarity and Jollity of Halloween Occasions w Halloween vors, Games 1 . Decorations Masks, Invitations, Place iper for Decorations, Table i, Doilies, Lanterns, Nut Cups tlloween Games. Gaines for t osteßS will find here numerous will prove most helpful. In Favor Department on Fourth Floor and in Stationery Department, First Floor Charles Mayer & Cos. j 29-31 W. Washnigton St. Established 1840. TRAVEL BUREAU Bo TZVom" u FLETCHER AMERICAN CO. p.„„ „ mce -8 R „. Main 5080 .- St. Florentin HIGH CHAIRS gn W. R. BEARD & CO. All Oak. Substantially Made. V * Unusually Low Priced. 453 east Washington MOVED OUR NEW STORE NOW AT 42 CIRCLE NEXT TO WHITE’S CAFETERIA Our Policy Still the Same BEST MATERIAL—BEST WORKMANSHIP PROMPTNESS CITY SHOE REPAIR CO. Send All Parcel Post Work to 42 Circle A— - ~ —t | Bea Go-Getter iWI Inactive water becomes stagnant and its usefulness deteriorates. The young ' QH person who puts things off, who always says, “conditions are not just | □a right to act. also goes backward. But the young men and young women ' ISM with “push.’’ vitality and honest, intelligent action go right on making | good. Such persons make their own conditions, and are aptly referred to , as “Go-Getters.7 Every one of us chooses the class to which we belong. I pM There's no getting around that. You may be a ''Waiter” or a “Go-Getter. | jjSI Which do you choose? Attend Indiana Business College at Marion. Muncle, ( in M Logansport. Anderson. Kokomo. Lafayette. Columbus Richmond. Vincennes or I Indianapolis. Chas. C. Cring is president ami Ora R. Blitz general manager, j Get in touch with the point you prefer or see, write or telephone Fred W. ! nfl Case, principal. | PennV I-I and Vermont, first dnnr north V. W, C. A,, Indianapolis.
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