Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 274, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 March 1926 — Page 10

PAGE 10

SANDY

WHAT HAS HAPPENED IN THE STORY SO FAR / Sandy McNeil, in love with life, marries Ben Murillo, a rich Italian, to nitase her impoverished family. Tyranny by Murillo and frequent quarrels follow. A son dies at birth. Bob McNeil, her uncle, aids in plans for Sandy and her mother to take a trip to Honolulu. There she mets Ramon Worth, who saves her life in the surf. On the same steamer home he declares his love. Murillo declares he will never release her. Judith Moore, a cousin, tells Sandy

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love is everything. Murillo overtakes her as she goes for a tryst with Ramon Follows a clash over her promise to her sick mother to give up plans for divorce. She apeals to Bob for aid In a divorce action. GO OX WITH THE STORY FROM HERE CHAPTER XLVII “Could you do it quietly, Bob? Without the newspapers getting hold of it? Without Isabel knowing un-

woman’s . efficiency rises as the thought of marriage falls. “As she abandons the art of selfdecoration for the ensnarement of man, her service to her employer increases," Brown said. “She is at her best in her thirties.” “She comes to mother her job, and the instinct of motherhood that dominates all women is lavished by the old maid on her work.” Flappers, he said, think much of men—they powder their noses. They flit about. “Y'et for certain kinds of work they excel older women,” he said. “Their specialty is the high speed job with some elements of the Charleston in it.” Married women without children are good workers. Brown said. Married women with children at home, however, are as restless as an animal away from its young. Brown said widows think what might have been and their minds are usually unsettled. Red-headed women are great workers as long as everything is running smoothly, but they are hard to manage, he found. - Women workers should not be too stout. Brown found. Flesh Is likely to mdicate lack of mental and physical activity. “It is the ‘slims’ that-get things done. They are like taut bowstrings—live, resilient, enduring.” The one great efficiency in women workers that limits their possibilities is that they shun taking responsibility, Brown said, \ Man remains in command largely because woman refuse to take the helm of direction.

RELATIVES ARE SOUGHT / Undertakers Hunt Kin of Charles Pliillips. Mcore & Kirk, undertakers, 2530 Station St., are seeking relatives of Charles Phillips, 67, who died Tuesday at the homo of Mrs. Lena Litch- * field, 531 N. East St. Phillips is said to have relatives in the city and at Cincinnati, Ohio. He was employed by Indianapolis Street Railway Company. COMPANY REORGANIZED Leather Goods Store Is Recapitalized by Bank. The reorganization of the Nowlin Leather Goods Company, 18-24 S. Forest Ave., with a capitalization of SIOO,OOO, all common stock, was announced today by the City Trust Company. The refinancing of the company was handled by the City Trust Company. L. V. Nowland, one of the founders, was elected president and general manager; Harry R. Ellis, formerly vice president an I treasurer; R. R. Scott, secetary and sales manager. RADlfl TELEPHONE The automatic radio telephone system established in October, 1924, for communication between the islands of Oahu and Lanai, Hawaii, continues in operation. This is said to be the first radio telephone in practical use/to prove successful.

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A NEW STORY OF A MODERN GIRL

til it was all over?” “Oh, well,” said Bob lazily— Sandy interrupted—blazing with oppressed excitement. “I promised her I wouldn’t. She’ll take it terribly. But I’m forced to do It. I can’t live on as I am. He won’t have it.” “He wants the divorce, too? But he’s willing to let you get it?” “He doesn’t know anything about it. I don’t intend to tell him till it’s i over.” “Don't intend to tell him till it’s over? What do you mean, kid? Do you think you can sneak into court, snatch a divorce o‘Jt of some legal grab box —” * * * Sandy slid from the table, the muscles of her throat contracting: “Would he have to know about it from the beginning?” “Naturally. He's an interested party.” She picked up a blotter, tearing the layers apart: “And if he didn’t want me to have it, could he prevent it?” “He could make it very difficult, unl/*?s you had strong grounds.” “I have!” “What are they?” She looked at her uncle accusingly. “Y'ou know amout those dinner invitations! Y'ou know how he Insulted Heinie—twice! I’m afraid to have a friend come to the house. I never go around, because I can’t so much as return a treat to an ice cream soda. He never gives hie a cent. He has loads of money. All the time Isabel’s been sick I’ve had to walk—walk miles. I don’t even see the girls I grew up with, because I’m ashamed to accept favors I can’t return.” “He persecutes you with his stinginess?” "Y'es, he does!” Bob reached over and touched the rings on Sandy's fingers—the circles of diamonds and emeralds: “He could refer to these, Sandy. He could show the hotel bills while you were in Honolulu. Y'ou couldn’t get a divorce on the ground of stinginess—” Sandy shut her eyes: “Those aren’t the grounds!” She sat down, covering her face with her hands. "What are they, then?” She answered in a still, breathless repression: “I hate hifn! He sickens

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

me. I won’t live with him. Nothing can make me. He doesn’t want a woman. He wants some kind of a fawning dog! Someone who will truckle to his every whim —” * * * She now became faint with the heat of her memories. “Even when I tried—honestly tried to do my part he walked on me. Before the baby was born and I dtdnt’ feel like having a mob scene I asked him to postpone the housewarming. He appeared to agree. Three days later he came home with the engraved invitations. My -wish meant simply nothing. The old Romany treated their favorite slaves with more consideration.” ■, “He causes you great mental suffering? That’s an easy cause for an uncontented divorce, an almost impossible one If he wants to fight it. Haven’t you anything more definite?” “Y'es.” And almost inaudibly: “It’s his fault the baby died. I was walking., It was hot. I couldn’t walk any farther. I sat down. I rested an hour, I started out again. I was faint. I couldn’t go on. I leaned against a sock. Then Timmy came. He’d passed me twice. I didn't know this. He gave me a lift—drove me to the house. And HE saw that." She put out her hand, shoved the blotter across the table. “He said things to me. He called me names. He said I could go—afterwards—in two months —after the baby came. He'd take the baby and I could go because he didn’t want a person like me in his house.” • • The feeling of suffocation—faint Ing suffocation, as on that oppressive day, returned. She felt Murillo's fingers biting into the flesh of her wrists, his breath hissing in her face. “I fainted. I struck my head. I fell heavily. So the baby was born —” Through the thick, befogged silence she heard Bob McNeil's voice. It had a teely ominous note. He repeated his question: “Did anyone see that, Sandy? Did anyone hear him call yon names? See him seizo your wrists?” She shook her head. “Wasn’t Ida In the house”

OUT OUR WAY—By WILLIAMS

“In the basement. She didn’t see It. No one saw it. But the baby was born. I was all right before doctor knows that. So It was born. And it wouldn’t have been! It would be alive now—” She claspedd her hands, wishing to hide thgir shaking. “There’s all that between us, Bob. I wouldn’t live with him again if it meant death to escape. He won’t let me stay on in the house any longer as I have been staying. He said so. Last night he tried to break the door down when I locked it. “And once before—the night we got home and I told him I wanted to be free —that I couldn’t return to our marriage,' he came at me with the fire tongs—” > “My God! Strike you, Sandy? Did he strike you?” “No. He was going to. He flung them against the wall.” “Did you scream? Did Ida hear I you? Could she be a witness?" She put an icy, shaking hand to shade her face. “I didn’t scream. No one saw him. We were alone.” Bob McNeil, a set, furious look on his handsome face, now filled his pipe, tapping in the tobacco with a pencil. He was seeing Sandy radiant, flinging the Spanish shawl about her' running through the grapevines. He had caught her more than once ....had laughed in his heart at her blithe, gypsy gladness. He saw her now with her life broken—a needless frustration. She was standing: “Those are grounds, aren’t they. Bob?” "Those aren’t grounds, Sandy. Because you can’t prove them.” “You mean I couldn’t get a divorce even if I tell all that?” “He cun deny it all. Everything you've said he can deny. If he intends to fight It, you have to have real proofs. It’s easy to get a dl-. vorce on any flimsy grounds when It's not contested. But if he started out to fight you with his money and Influence, you need a much stronger case than you've got. He might bring counter charges.” “Ho would. He'd make me black as pitch. He said so.” Sandy reached for her bag. Dizziness crept through her veins. “Then you can’t get it for me, Bob? No—you said you can't. And to herself, murmuring—

by Elenore Meherin, AUTHOR OF “CHICKIE"

“What shall I do? I wonder what I'm to do?” • • • An hour later Sandy left the office In the back of the store that served Bob McNeil more as a lounging room than law office. She hurried, halting now and then to ask her blindly: “What’s the rush?” Bob said sho must go, home—not talk about tumping to the city—wait—prepare herself —be able to earn a living. He’d talk to Murillo. Murillo had the Latin temperament—he was cooled off now. Lob would make arrangements with him. Sandy should stay in the house indefinitely. They needn’t mention any further plans of hers. But she must go home. ‘‘Y'es —no place else to go—” Late afternoon when she reached the garden. Chrysanthemums—gaudy, golden things marching in splendor down they walk. She thought: “Is he in there now?” She felt weighted. Her heart was cold —a lump of Iron. She went through the yard to the kitchen. She said to Ida: "Hello—any one home? Mr. Murillo come yet?” “No—he’s not come.” She ate her dinner alone. Tears fell to her plate. She said to herself, trying to laugh: “His food . . . I’m eating his food—” She went to her room and locked the door. When she was ready for bed she stood at her bureau and slipped the rings from her finger. She set them, with her bracelet, iij. a little tray. She looked at the gleaming little mound, thinking quietly: “I could hock these. I’d get enough to live on while I ■ was waiting for a job—” * * • She slept late. She stood at the window at 9 the next morning, letting the breeze run through her hair. It stood out about her pale face and shadowed eyes like an areolc. Someone knocked —knocked again —three times. She f went over softly, pulled the door wide, stepped into the hall. It was Murillo. He smiled: “Good morning! Nice that you’re able to sleep late, isn’t It? Nice that you don’t have to rise early and get your huslwmd’s bredkfast. And you're willing to do this indefinitely? Gracious In you, my dear! I'll try to appreciate the favor.”

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FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS—By BLOSSER

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He brushed past her. He stood in the middle of the room, glancing about. His eyes turned to the bureau, rested on the glittering mound of jewels. A slow, gleaming satisfaction on

"For Sale —One good spare tire, painted with Kokomo High School colors.” The offer was made by Ira Johnson following the defeat of his team by Marion. Five pups are being thawed out and fed warm milk in the office of Dr. I. B. Levy of Greensburg. They were found by Bert Brodie and Leonard Buell. The pups were abandoned by some heartless tax dodger, Dr. Levey said. Mrs. Ella Williams of Evansville, claims the champion egg laying hen. One egg was seven and three-quart-ers inches by six and one-quarter inches in circumference. Deputy Coroner Adolph Hufnagel of Evansville, borrowed Christ Shaad’s 100-year-old bullet mold to make lead sinkers for his fishing line. This is a sure sign of real spring, neighbors say. Flora residents are getting their dogs in condition and renovating their hunting togs following the announcement that a real for sure coon chase would be staged this week. Another sign of spring came to light at Bloomington with the announcement that tho Fish Game League would meet to decide whether to go into tho Izaak Walton League as a body. William Emerick, Elkart, won first prize In an old fiddlers’ contest at Mishawaka. Charles Willis, South second. The Rev. Billy Sunday, evangelist, has presented the Winona Assembly and Bible Conference with ten acres Os land, valued at SIO,OOO, on the lake front near Winona Boy City. Alfred H. Heacock, 94, pioneer flour mill man, at Columbia City, died at his daughter's residence In Warsaw, Wednesday.

OUR BOARDING HOUSE—By AHERN

the curved lips. He took tho Uttlc tray in his hand. "I’ll take care of these, my dear,” swept the Jewels to his palm, smiled at Sandy and put them la his pocket. (To Ik- Continued)

HOOSIER BRIEFS

Dr. U. S. Bridge, district superintendent of the Methodist Episcopal Church, has been asked to reassign Rev. H. L. Llddle to tho Middle Street Methodist church pastorate at Wabash. Seven Republicans and two Democrats of Warsaw aspire to be sheriff of Kosciusko County. There are also seven Republican candidates for county recorder. MAYOR APPOINTS WIFE l She Accepts but Protest “Woman’s Flare in Home.” Bv Times Special LORAIN, Ohio, March IS.—Mrs. j Florence Grail, nppolntod director of public safety In Lorain by her husband. Mayor William F. Grail, says: “Woman’s place is In the home, not In politics. “I only accepted the office be. cause my husband needed me and Ii think it is tho duty of any woinpn* to help her husband In an emergency.” Tho “emergency” followed Mayor Grail’s discharge of safety director H. G. King “for lack of loyalty and cooperation.” Mrs. Grail who is the mother of six children, ranging In age from 2 to 14, says she would rather stir up a cake, bake a batch of cookies or read a paper at the aid society inerting than direct routine duties from tho desk of a city executive. CUTS INTERFERENCE The United States Navy officials are doing their best to eliminate the Interference their wireless sets create. The broadcast band of joo to 545 meters Is recognized and tho Navy makes a strenuous effort to keep outside of tho restricted band.

MARCH 18, RJ2U