Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 307, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 April 1926 — Page 8
PAGE 8
SANDY
THE STORY SO FAR SANDY McNETL. in love with life, marries BEN MURILLO, a rich Italian. . to please her Impoverished family. Tyranny by Murillo and frequent quarrels follojv. A son dies at birth. BOH McNEIL. her uneie. aids in plans for Sandy and her mother to take a trip to Honolulu. There she meets RAMON WORTH, who saves her life In the surf. On the same steamer home he deplores his love. Murillo says he will never release her. JUDITH MOORE, a eousin. tells Sandy love is everything. Murillo overetakes her as she goes for a tryst with Ramon. He appears, unexpectedly, at a party she is (riving for her friends. She leaves his home and accepts the kindly attentions of Ramon, whose homo she shares. She leaves for her home when she learns her mother is ill. Sandy's mother dies and she goes to livo with her cousin, Judith, after parting with Ra- • raon, Judith’s friend. DOUGLAS KEITH, gives a party to which Sandy and HAL HUME, a friend of Douglas, are invited. Douglas, whom Judith loves, is fascinated by Sandy. One evening Judith sees them together. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER LXXX -"They looked Into each other’s young, glowing eyes. Swiftly Sandy’s closed, overwhelmed with a sudden, stabbing ecstacy. He loved her. The sweetness of all his clean, bonny life was hers. lAghtly she stole to that room of Judith's. She closed the door, leaning against it, her face hidden. She laughed In a soft, piercing way. He loved her! She stood In this flame-lit hour, all the past of her life obliterated, telling herself with that half-sobbing laugh: “He loves me.” v* * * .Tudlth stumbled against the coalbin, straightened herself with a little gasp: "Oh—the coal bln ” She smiled to the throbbing shadows of the dark musty basement, whispering In a vague, gentle way: “I know now. Now, I know.’’ She saw the quick, glad sweep of his arm enfolding Sandy. She sat on the edge of the bln and wiped the moisture from her forehead. After a long, long space came that persistent, pathetic thing that is hope in a valiant soul. Hope came to Judith, whispering: “Because you never saw him kiss a girl before, you imagine this is different. Because Sandy lives with you and it all goes on before your eyes, you fancy It complete—the love of a life. Why should It be? How could he be so blind?” “It’s not different. It’s just like all those other episodes of his ...” She now got up quietly, surprised to And her knees weak, her hands clammy and shaking. She might say again and'again: “It’s not different —juift a flirtation.” A cruel intuition told her that he whom she loved these four years with all the passionate idealism of her girlhood; he In whoso eyes dwelt all of beauty and all of romance, was now passing from her. One unforgettable day in November, the last filament in Judith’s hope vanished. It was the day of the Big Game. For three years Douglas J}ad taken her. In the weeks preceding this seraphic event, they talked football incessantly, had on their fingertips the qualifications of the players and the points that gave California the edge to win. They tfere almost hysterical as though the burden of victory or, defeat rested on their Individual shoulders. This year the four of them were going together. Sandy was beside herself with elation. She came home with bolts of blue and gold ribbon and four tiny grizzly bears that she decorated jubilantly. She said: “Lord, Jude, 1 can hardly wait. “I wish it was Saturday. You know I've never been to one of these games. I've only read about it.’’ “Never been to a big game? Oh. Sandy, darling—you’re in for the thrill of your life.” The sudden return of Judith to her old, warm tenderness brought a mist or tears to Sandy’s eyes. She askfed trembling, “You’re glad to have me along, Jude? You really want me?” Do 1? I wouldn’t ha?-e you miss it for forty thousand dollars. And it’s lots more fun wiih four than two.” Judith meant this. In her opinion it would be counted a tragedy to miss this supreme, ecstatic hour of mingled anguish and delight. And now, finding that Sandy had never seen the magnificent spectacle, she began fervently to explain points of the game. She said with frank eagerness, “Get Douglas to chart it for you; he adores making diagrams.” The game heralded the opening of the Memorial Stadium in Berkeley. They arrived early, saw the tiers and tiers of bleachers spring into
WEAK, AND IN TERRIBLE PAIN Alabama Lady Took Cardui and Tells How She Regained Strength. “I Just Feel Fine and Enjoy Life Now," She Says. Mrs. Mary Hardy, 400 Henderson Avenue, Talladega, says that seven years ago she ‘‘got down sick" and was unable to attend to her horfsework. "I have never been so weak before or since,” she says. "I had a terrible pain in my side—so sore In my side and the lower part of my body. ‘‘Across my back ached, and I was so nesvotis I couldn't stand up. I had just about given up when someone who came to see me began talking about Cardui. This caused me to get it. 1 took abont two bottles before I saw much improvement. "After this, though, I picked up right away. I slept better at night. I was hungry, enjoyed my food, which I hadn’t done for somo time. “The pain and soreness gradually left my side. I regained my strength. I took about six bottles and left off for a then took two or three more. . . . I feel just line, enjoy life and can work now, too. “I have a young daughter. She was puny for awhile —just dragging around, color bad and feeling tired. She needed a tonic. I gavo her Cardui and she felt so much better.” Mothers must indeed hath confidence in a medicine when they recommend it, or give it to their own daughters.
by ELENORE MEHERIN, Author of “CHICKIE”
radiant bloom; saw those glowing splashes of the blue and gold, and on the opposite, the waving crimson tide. The two girls sat next each other, the boys at either end. “What’s that? Lord—look,” Sandy kept whispering when the band marched on the field and the rooters gave a wild “Oskl.” “Gee,” Douglas grinned, sitting down hoarse from his yelling. “Isn’t this rich, Jude? She’s never seen It before.” He looked at Sandy with a teasing tenderness, saying to Judith, “She’s a bear herself, isn’s she?” “Yes,” said Judith, laughing; “she is." And to herself, "That look Is love —It’s love." It was love, too, that made him pause even In his frenzy of shouting to grab Sandy’s hand—to push a pair of field glasses at her with a sharp, "Understand —oh, get It —look at that! Don’t miss this.” More than love—lnfatuation com. plete and self-forgetful, Judith read in th%ir two faces a little later. Spent, yet hilarious, they were pushed and jostled with the crowd. In the wide corridors at the first landihg trie crowd thinned. And they —Sandy and Douglas—were just ahead of her, pausing in one of those beautiful white arches that look out on a scene of such poetic color; that frame a view of transcendent loveliness with the sunset glow on the distant waters and the wistful eucalyptis etched on a magento sky. They stood here a moment lost in the dream of each other’s presence —looking at a ship—a gossamer ship filing across the waters. Sandy rased her eyes to his—eyes melting with emotion. His head was lowered, the lips parted and his cheeks pale. They walked on, absently as though unaware of the throngs. ‘Judith turned her head with a quick, hysterical: “Wasn't It wonderful? Oh, how joyous!” She thought: "Why did I see it! Why did I see it” — She w*s forced to wipe her eyes. Hume took her arm more firmly: "Does It affect you that much, Judith”— ‘‘Yes—l love football”— And she heard nothing of all he was saying. She kept asking: “What did you say? Oh, pardon me, I'm so excited.” She thought: “If I could only get away—ls I didn’t have to go with them tonight—Can I get out of it—can I say I'm ill —You'll go!” She clenched her teeth grimly. The heavy thumping Os her heart weakened her. But she, too, looked out to the water. She prayed as thdugh some understanding spirit who had love<4 and who had watched his love turn from him were walking at her side and listened to her prayer, “Give me strength—don’t let any one see —help me”— She could have wept finding herself so weak, finding her heart shaking. She raised her head very high and smiled beautifully into Hal Ilume's face. • • • But at dinner she watched them. They danced. They came back to the table with stained cheeks and glowing, absent eyes. Hume and Judith were once alone. "They {lance fine together, don't they?” he said. “Yes”— He hesitated, raised his eyebrows: “Why doesn’t. Sandy get a divorce?” “She can’t. Her husband won't give it to her. She has plenty of cause, I think. He treated her abominably ” "How could a man treat her so?” “He did....but he won’t let her go free... .It's terrible on her. She's only 22.” He nodded; his eyes meeting Judith's squarely: “More terrible on him, Judith.” “Oh, what do you mean? Do you think he cares really for Sandy? He's always had cases....” “Not flke this, Judith....” She pressed her long, slender fingers together and murmured: “What can any one do?” “Perhaps she doesn’t realize he ought to-tell her, Judith Send her away. Ask her to go away.” Judith stared at him with wide, shocked eyes. “You thin)? I should do this?” “Yes—l think you should do It.” (To Be Continued.)
MR. FIXIT Autos Can Be Parked in One Place 12 Hours Outside Congested Area.
Flxl J, Present your ease to city officials. He Is The Times repreat Thi V Times! * haU ' Write tm Unless an automobile is parked longer than twelve hours outside the congested district, nothing can be done to remedy night parking in streets, DEAR AIR. FIXIT: On Prospect St., from East St. to Madison Ave., automobiles park on both sides of the street, leaving room for one car only to pass. Hast night I had to reverse my car a block to let pass a car going .east. TIMES READER. A city ordinance allows parking twelve hours. DEAR MR. Fixjr: Is it a fact that Gemmer Ave. has been changed by city ordinance to E. lowa St., and if so why does the new street signs still designate it as Gemmer Ave.? F. M. SMITH, 1625 E. lowa St. It, is lowa St. The city engineer’s department will investigate the discrepancy in the signs. DEAR MR. FIXIT: While the city is having its spring "clean-up will you call the attention of authorities to the plot of ground owned by the city between ThirtySixth St., Fairfield Ave. and Winthrop Ave.? TAXPAYER. Neither the park board nor the board of works will admit ownership of the ground. The park board owns land not far away, however.
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OUT OUR WAY—By WLLLIAMS
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NEW INSURANCE PLAN Firm Has Provision for Protecting Employes. By United Pres. l NEW YORK, N. Y\, April 24. The American Seeding Machine Company, manufacturers of grain drills, has adopted a group insurance program providing approximately $600,000 life insurance and the same amount of accidental death and dismemberment protection for employes of its Springfield, Ohio, plant and for those attached to its branches in Indianapolis, Ind., Lansing, Mich., Syracuse, N. Y., Harrisburg, Ra., and Baltimore, Md. The insurance is being underwritten by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. Already nearly 470 employes participating in the plan, which was arranged on a I cooperative basis, whereby the premiums on the insurance will be paid jointly by employer and workers. * BOOST STATEPRODUCTS Conference of Rakers, Millers Is Planned for May 18. To encourage greater use of Indiana products, a State-wide conference of millers and bakers will be held at Purdue University, May 1819 under auspices of the university, Indiana Millers’ Association, the Indiana Bakers’ Association and the
T HE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Indiana Home Economics' Association. A feature wall be a banquet at which the finest of Indiana products will be served. Other fe.-ttures include flour and baked products exhibits and demonstrations. GRANDMAS^ FIGHT YOUTH Will See That, “Next Generation Is Brough^lp Properly.” flu Timm Special LONDON. April 26.—Disgusted with the dress, manners and morals of the modern girl, grandmothers of the Wolworth district have formed a club whose object is to see that the next generation of girls is brought up properly. Mrs. Grace Foster, 83, herself a great-grandmother, as are several other members, declared the Grandmothers’ club was unable longer to endure the trend of modern youth. SUITE COSTS S6O DAY > ' Former Apartment of King of Sianf Is Rented, flu Times Special BANGKOK, Siam, April 26.—A real royal suite is offered to tourists here, who want to pay the S6O a day charged for occupying the former private apartment* of the King of Slam at his palace, Just converted into a hotel. The hotel palace is five miles from here, and is noted for its wonderful gurdens, which require the attention of ninety gardeners. )
SALESMAN SAM—By SWAN
BOOTS ,\ND HER BUDDIES—B\ MARTIN
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS—By BLOSSEB
SOVIET WINS PRIZES Russians Take Nine Honors at Exposition. By United Press COPENHAGEN, April 26.—For toothsomeness and skilful seasoning, tho canned goods of the Soviet republic walked off with nine honorary diplomas at the International Exposi’ion of the Canning Industry here. This triumph has greatly surprised tho “tinned goods” experts of Europe, who had not counted upon Bolshevik competition.
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APRIL 26, 1926
