Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 249, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 February 1932 — Page 17

FEB. 23, 1032

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‘CHAPTER EIGHTEEN (Continued) “You and Ellen go,” Molly said ■with naive haste. "I'd love it, but I’ve promised to drop in or a neighbor for a few minutes. Mrs. Clancy downstairs.” Bert, stretched at, full length on the couch, had lapsed into somnolence, but when Steven spoke he roused. “Myra and I’ll go along,” he announced, yawning. “I’ve never rid-

HORIZONTAL YESTERDAY’S ANBWER 8 Assessment 1 Male. _ rating. 4 Beam. ’ S.P.ASPJ jMIAITT|N| 9.Testa. 7 Chairman of the Federal 4 J JNGI 11 Senator Huey Reconstruction r L ° n . S lu Pre ’ corporation. f n^!; e state 9 What country SbSL IDITOePn 13 To dibble, is engaged in |ll |'| |i| l| i||f | | 15 Public walk. war v*fe VA' I IkIIE AIPA 16Kett,e----11 Tardy ? B E^WtTODBP TSE N\l CorwbblOT ated * 1L Mir - l llKircf dffn r i 20 Beverage. H Snare. JL.U|NtS 22 Classifies. 16 Attitude. Ir-.Y 1 .L|K| IRk-,b.lßiSl 23 To scoff, 17 Post to which 26 Fuel. a person to be 30 bti,r - 51 Approaches. 2 8 Spigot, burned is 31 To desist. 53 Fleshy under- 32 Golf teacher, hound. 32-3.141. ground stem. 34 Parts of plants 19 Earth. 33 To stimulate. 55 Render for betow ground 21 Opposite of in. 35 Stair. aßh,n K° res - 35 Squandered. 22 Machines for 36 Negative. 56 Observed. 37 Poem, stamping sheet. 38 Rodent. VERTICAL 39 Rotation. 40 Prying sneak. ITo measure. 41 Coin. 24 female of a 42 Insane. 2 Affirmative. 42 Heath. fallow deer. 43 Rurden. 3 Northeast. 44 Hard fat. 31 Seventh note. 45 Stabbed. 4 Sun god. 46 Inflated. 26 Point at which 46 To augur. 5 Liable. 48 Fifth month. _ a rare ends. 47 Cuckoopint. 6 Thirty-six 50 Striped fabric. 27 Delivered. 49 To sunburn Inches. 52 Second note. 29 Mother. 50 Herb. 7 Long pole. 54 You and me.

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Nothinq like it” ) SAYS I EpWARD BRADFORD ijX J 123 West Fortysixth Street , Wk > £ Indianapolis, Ind. v. . —*■ “I've never eaten such a good bar as Tropic Breeze—and those whole toasted almonds make it still better. It certainly was great to get paid $5 for my picture. What a surprise that was!” You’ll get a surprise, too, when you taste your first Tropic Breeze. No-other bar like it—sc everywhere. GETS *5 Bl LL The pci <oii whose picture appears m this a.,re, Its e merit was paid $5 by the Tropic Breeze Picture Man for the use of his picture and his statement about Tropic Breeze candy bars, c ""canTy** irart toasted almonds | a BARGAINS FRIDAY | Mr""""' BUY ALL YOU WANT I RIB ROAST Lb 10c I I Breakfast Bacon Lb. 10c II I Rib Pork Chops Lb. 11 y 2 I 407 E. Wash. St. \ \ I l 43 N. Alabama St. II V**' •J 3 63 Virginia Ave. II L 7 316 W. Wash St. i 2015 E. 10th St. I / lv\ tA T 2i)l8 N. Illinois St. s ll II j-- 7 MARKETS 285>mi“0”stfcJNc ALL MEATS KILLED and IN OUR OWN LOCAL PLANT //m

den in a limousine and 1 don't want to miss the chance.” n n n SOMEWHAT to hie own surprise, Bert did not accompany Ellen and Steven on the drive. He did not understand entirely how it happened that instead he took Myra to a neighborhood movie theater. Ellen could have told him. As usual, Molly had managed. The girl’s cheeks were burning as

| the heavy car swished up Pine , street arid turned toward the , Heights. Steven had fallen silent and she I wondered in a fever of nervousness ■what he was thinking of all this. Certainly he must have seen that the ride had been arranged deliberately by Molly. There was a curious light in the : world, more elusive than moonlight and yet like moonlight. Gray buildings seemed to come alive with the still, odd light. It lay along the street in pools. Not a breath of wind stirred and the dusty trees stood motionless as painted trees. They drove on to Brooklyn Heights. The limousine was parked and the chauffeur wandered away. Reflected in the star-spangled harbor, lower Manhattan, with its tall buildings and lighted windows, became unreal as a dream. A beautiful fanciful panorama massed like the towering cities in the clouds, so that at any momerc one might expect the whole to float away. The odors, though, were close and real. The good, sharp smell of water and grass; the friendly smell of Steven’s cigar; the intangible, mysterious smell of the night itself. There were the mournful sounds of steamboat whistles and the gentle lapping of water. There were the low voices of lovers whispering on hidden benches. Gradually, there stole over Ellen a sense of luxury and well being. She had been foolishly, almost hysterically, reluctant ,to go out alone with Steven, apprehensive lest he should say to her what she so ardently desired should go unsaid. Now those vague, troubled fears and apprehensions were lost, as were her fears of the ultimate destination of her family. It was enough to sink back among soft cushions, and to drink in the magic beauty of the evening. “It's not true, is it?” she asked Steven dreamily as she stared out across the water. “Nothing could be so lovely and still be true.” “That’s rather a hard philosophy, don’t you think?” “Oh, I don’t know.” Her laugh in the darkness was uncertain. She had been entirely at ease. Now she wondered if he were thinking her childish and immature. She was never quite sure of herself when she was with him. It was hard to forget that he was Steven Barclay, owner of Barclay’s department store, hard to forget that he was a great deal wiser than she—a great deal older. How presumptuous Molly had been; how presumptuous she herself had been to imagine that he was sentimentally interested in her. He was Steven Barclay! nutt BUT if she could have read Barclay’s thoughts she would have known that she was wrong. He, too, was self-conscious. It was only that age had taught him to hide his feelings. He always had taken what he wanted from the world. Indeed, what he wanted had come so easily that he had grown a little contemptuous of the world and the ease of conquer- : ing it. Now as his mood of self-con- ; sciousness increased he felt a pang of real fear that the desire which had obsessed him when he first caught sight of the young girl at his side would, in the end, fail of fulfillment. They were silent again. Ellen i was entirely unprepared when Steven leaned forward and took her hands. “Look at me. Ellen,” he bade her in a strange, breathless voice. As she obeyed she knew what was coming. She checked a wild impulse to leap from the car, to run away and hide in the night, an impulse of pure panic. Instead, she

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Yesterday's Answer

UNAAISGN SHANGHAI Shanghai is the important city which can he spelled by rearranging the letters shown above. . 25

TARZAN THE TERRIBLE

Half opening one eye, Tarzan matched his guard. The warrior stood at the cave entrance, looking out, his back turned toward the prisoner. The ape-man tested the bonds securing his wrists. They seemed none too stout and they had tied his hands in front of him! Sure evidence that these creatures took few prisoners—if any. Cautiously Tarzan raised his wrists and soon his strong teeth began work upon them. The last knot had been loosened when the guard turned to look at the prisoner.

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sat quietly, her cold slim hands in his. “I suppose you’ve guessed what I mean to say,” Barclay began, plunging desperately because his carefully rehearsed phrases had failed. “Why should I have guessed?” she asked in a trembling voice. “I intended to wait,” he went on. ‘‘Perhaps it would have been better to wait but I can not—l can not! Let me give you the lovely things of life, my dear. Let me prove to you that some of them may be true!” It occurred to him. even as he

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

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FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS

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was speaking, that she might misunderstand him. So he said bluntly, “I want you to marry me.” Ellen tried to speak, but he stopped her. “Don’t answer. I don’t want your answer until you hear many things you should hear. You must first see the drawbacks and they are many. For one thing Tm years older than you. I’ve done all the things you never have done and probably long to do, and, I’ve found many of them tiresome and boring. For another —there’s that unfortunate divorce of mine—”

He saw the prisoner’s position was changed. The wrarrier came closer and bent down. The wrist bonds seemed very loose. He extended his fingers to examine them. Instantly, the two hands leaped from their bonds—one to seize his own wrist, the other his throat. So unexpected the catlike attack, that the hairy warrior had not even time to cry out before steel fingers silenced him.

“Don’t go on please,” she begged. “You mean there is no use going on? You mean that there is someone else?” He attempted to make his tone light, but anguish gripped him and he turned away. He had not known until then how she could make him suffer, a young girl of whose very existence he had been unaware two weeks before. “No, I don’t mean that exactly,” Ellen said jerkily. ‘Tm not engaged to any one, if that’s what you’re asking.” At the moment she was too confused to know clearly what she

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The creature pulled him suddenly forward so that he lost his balance and rolled over upon the prisoner. An instant later Tarzan was upon his breast. The warrior struggled to release himself—struggled to withdraw his knife; but Tarzan found it before him. The Wazdon’s tail leaped to the other’s throat, encircling it— he too could choke; but his own knife, in the hands of his antagonist, severed the sinewy mejaber dose to ita root.

was saying. How easy everything would be if only she could say the one word! Her mother and Mike fend Myra—what things she could do far them as Mrs. Steven Barclay. Had she the right to fail them all to pursue a will-o’-the-wisp? CHAPTER NINETEEN ELLEN brushed aside all coquetry and pretense as she told Steven how proud he had made her. She tried to make him understand how much she liked him, at the same time explaining that she did not love him.

OUT OUR WAY

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—By Edgar Rice Burroughs

The Waz-don's struggles became weaker ard a moment later he was dead. Tarzan rose to his feet and placed one foot upon the breast of his foe. How the urge seized him to roar forth the victory cry of the great apes! But he dared not. He discovered his rope had not been removed. All his weapons were untouched. Strange ereatures! He did not know they had a superstitious fear of the weapons of a centered enemy, and so had not touched them.

PAGE 17

She was more successful than She had hoped to be. She should, of course, have xplalned that she already was hopelessly in love with Larry Harrowgate. Pride, backed by a desire to hurt him as little as possible, forbade that. , Because she had not,/fOld him. Steven felt he had yet,-a chance to win her. He fancied that he had frightened her by being premature, by rushing his suit. Ellen was to blame for that. All unconsciously, she had hardened his determination to make her his wife. (To Be Continued)

—By Williams

—By Blossei:

—By Crane

—By Small

—By Martin