Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 255, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 March 1932 — Page 15
MARCH 3, 1932
Ojodmo-n-dancQ girl iff .lOflfl CLUVIPf'I ,
CHATTER TWENTY-THREE (Continued) “I can't say as I blame you," observed Bob tactlessly as he stared t Ellen. "You artists are lucky Jellows. I wish I was one.” ‘Tt wouldn’t do any good if you were,” Larry said with growing irritation. "Miss Rossiter is not a professional model. She’s only giving me a lift for the show.”
HORIZONTAL YESTERDAY’S ANSWER 15 Sea eagle. 1 Sedate. [CjLIFI IfI'ANAYI I Id lalrlal 17 Newspaper 6 Mohammedan* AfljLL BAIK EIR fclAiP * paragraphs, ism. SjEILIR) lAiMi I [Nig leSOr'eT 19*Dcop of eye 11 On what sea IED-DQI FfiCif IP EE DI fluid* is Port Arthur?. r rj ,, IQOiOPWeII .© Et 20 Without. 13 Pertaining to B;OjSQiMvJMQQTT[EID 22 Revolves, air. QjB[E|S]O|BBfRE 23 To burn in--14 Intelligence. Gl I |y|EJrvsßC[A KNE N wardly. It; Silk worm. IE iRiS.EMUL E Si 26 Division of 28 Main points in OiRALI RjOiTi EfCHQI the calyx. debates. WjElLiT] [S|M| I iTIHI SIL AiMl 27 Horse 21 To jog. E,E Apl_IHQ [_ ~IA|VE| 30 Chum! 22 0rl„d, IslM IS’EINIS'EtefTI IripKil 32 Female row!. Rea ‘ 33 U. S. envoy to 25 Conjunction. 43 Made flat. VERTICAL China. ? rd !!" S L 1? eccnt - 1 Assembly. 34 At no time. .ight brown. 4f, \Vayside 2 Examination. 36 The rainbow. *®' ou - *? otelß - 3 Beer 37 Mentally 3° By. 48 to divide. !J 1 . sound. 311s suffocated. 4!) Female horse. 4 s "“ x a< ** 38 Satan. 33 What sea sepa- 50 King of the jectives. <0 Valiant man. rates Japan serpent race. 5 Agents. 41 Pitcher, from China? 52 Border. 7 South Amer* 44 Citrous* fruit 86 To slumber. 53 Notoriety. ica. 45 Entitled. 36 Separated or 54 Rowing imple* 8 Limb. 47Chai.se.* detached ments. 9 Melody. 49 Dumb. 39 Lair of a beast. 56 To settle. 10 Wrong step 51 Branch 40 Masculine 58 Lovely girl or 12 Sacred docu* 53 Rodent, pronoun. dryad. ments. 55 Spain (Abbri. 42 Hurrah. 59 Famous. 14 To stop. 57 Company mKmm b 3—K, ! J G 7 n : r JHp to \k> mg!* ~ ** ™ —“ j 33 —i—3f> b? w m-T W— l - - ttgsff fffgfg 55 ~ L " W —L—--58 5§
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“A RE you two goofs going to stand up all night or doesn’t Miss Rossiter ever sit down?” Lona inquired, reaching out for a sandwich. “Sit down, Ellen—please do. I’ve saved this chair for you,” Larry said hurriedly, shooting a venomous glance at Lona, who remained calmly oblivious of it. "Don’t pay any attention to my wife,” Bob explained seriously.
1 "She’s always that way to other women.” Lonas laugh was not amused. Ellen crossed the room and sat down in the chair beside Larry’s. She tried desperately to think of something to say, something to show that she did not care what Lona was imagining and inferring. She had no refuge except to smile again on this horrible, hot, sticky night sitting with these people so conscious of their separation from her. Her very soul was sick. All in all, it was the most wretched evening she ever had spent with Larry. Lona did everything she could to make Ellen feel alien from the group. She chattered of places Ellen never had been, of people Ellen never had seen, of prospective parties to which Ellen would not be invited. Neither Bob’s blundering efforts to stop her nor Larry’s open irritation could stem the light lash of her tongue. Ellen endured it as long as she could. She had hoped to hold out until Bert and Myra returned, but found she could not. Pleading extreme weariness she broke away within half an hour. She refused to let Larry take her home. "I hate him!” Ellen told herself as she hurried along the airless street toward the subway station. “I hate him!” CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR AT the beginning of the long subway ride from Larry’s studio to the Brooklyn apartment Ellen was plunged in misery. The evening had been the most wretched of her life. She studied the brightly colored subway cards with eyes that filled and refilled with tears. Lona Clendenning had forced her to see what before she had refused to admit. Association with Larry had been folly from the beginning. It was late now to mend that original mistake. but mend it Ellen would. Larry should not be permitted to ruin her life, to take all her thoughts and dreams to himself, to take all the best that was in her and to give nothing in return. Nothing except casual, irresponsible, foolish pleasures that left her discontented and dissatisfied, straining always for something more. In her mind she framed the polite little note that woudl tell him of the unavoidable duties which prevented her from posing further. It was to be a cold and impersonal note, a final note, with nothing between the lines for the cleverest to read. At 11 ’clock she reached the Brooklyn apartment. Molly and Mike were long asleep. Ellen cautiously tiptoed jnto her bedroom. Before undressing, she wrote the note to Larry. It had cost her a few tears, but Larry never would guess that. He would never know the bright fancies and dreams that she had woven about his irresponsible figure. She sealed the envelope and placqd it on the bureau for morning mailing. She was in bed, but not asleep, when Myra entered and turned on the lights. "Awake, Ellen?” she asked softly. Ellen kept her eyes shut a minute and then opened them. "Why’d you run away from us?” Myra demanded. "We got there only ten minutes after you left. Larry seemed rather worried about you.” ‘He needn’t worry any more,” Ellen replied quietly. "What is it? Did something happen?” When Ellen did not answer, Myra went on viciously, "I bet that Clendenning woman said something. We didn’t stay, so I barely met her, but if I ever saw a natural cat that woman is one.” Ellen turned her head away from
STKKEftS> . - - __ ____ __ • ~ Can you move the checker, in 16 moves, over a whole board, touching each square but once and ending at the starting place? Passing over several squares in a straight line is but one move. Every him indicates a new move v Yesterday’s Answer ENCYCLOPEDIA > “Encyclopedia” is the word that can be spelled from the letters given in the puzzle.
TARZAN THE TERRIBLE
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Directly below Tarzan lay the forbidding Kor-ul-gryf, a dense, somber green of gently swaying tree tops. To the ape-man it was neither grim nor forbidding—it was jungle, beloved jungle, and he was hungry. Pan-at-lee had told him of the dreadful creature roaming below, but never had Tarzan of the Apes met with jungle creature with which his brute strength and cunning brain could not cope. But Tarzan had never met a gryf!
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES '.
the glare of the light. She stared at a patch of starry sky cut out between tall buildings and crisscrossed with clothes lines. “Don’t let’s discuss it, Myra,” she said with a catch in her breath. "I don’t feel up to it now. But I’m never going to see Larry again.” an n SHE was wrong. She saw him the next night at Dreamland. The long spell of heat had been broken by a welcome rain storm. Rain had fallen all day and was still falling In the evening. Asa result Dreamland was practically deserted except by stray gen-
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
% SO YOU LAPS ARE A BiT a**, , f AND NNAMi TO LET YOUR-ROOM-I RENT RIDE TOP- A —AMP “WGOS\\! TMAKKS , | You're afraid to as* my good.if lot; major./ i \ | WEE ? WELL, BY JOVE, YOU GAME TO* \ TrtMlK YOUR WEA j / A'S LEERY ASl\ | The f?;<?hT OARiY FOR ADVICE —I VViLL WORKOUT /A AM OF YOU, AMOS’ | NOW, I WOULD SUGGEST THAT YOU k GREAT /) -fHi? T/AiE XTM INK 7 SCRUB UP THE CELLAR—CARRY / MAYBE YOU'VE lES ANP ’ \ G, VE US A GOOD; ■iR., VARNISH "THE %//// * OUT J/ or—Them, surely,,
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
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WASHINGTON TUBBS II
tejAUTOUSLY, RIP TURNS THE HANDLE oA ( I A 13 THE TrtlßP POOR ANP PEEPSIM. ’ t / J ~ , y DCOtS A AK,P HEAP CMEO HEELS.
SALESMAN SAM
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BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES
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He began the descent into the gorge. Reach-* ing its foot he strode into the jungle, eyes and ears alert, his sensitive nostrils searching the air for scent spoor of game. Most of the odors were strange to him. Once, he sensed faintly the .reptilian odor that he had learned to connect with the strange nocturnal forms that had loomed, dim and bulky, on several occasions since he came to Pal-ul-don. Sudr denJy he caught the strong, sweet odor of Bara, the deer.
tlemen who ducked in to avoid the downpour. The rest of the meager crowd was made up of a few ardent devotees of dancing who could have been kept away from Dreamland by nothing short of death. In spite of frequent absences from the dance hall—or perhaps because of them —Ellen had become popular with those habitual patrons. All the men wanted to dance with the girl so difficult to obtain for a partner, the girl who was so different from the others, so standoffish and so impersonal. She was blue and discouraged as she danced. Her heart was heavy.
How long the evening was! How she hated these men who paid 10 cents for a dance and expected a flirtation as well. A sense of injustice oppressed her. Twenty years old—and she might as well have been 50. Yes, she was miserable. She was dancing when Larry came in. Ellen, trembling, saw him sweep the floor with his eager eyes and felt her heart stop when those eyes met hers. He had started across the floor bent on snatching her from the arms of her partner when, fortun-
—By Ahern
1 GOOD GO CM, M A -YOU Don't USE. I HEAO ATAIU MOW WAItP- \ ~ ,71 INSTiDDA ujGGisj' Am' Pulum' 'AT V • &\Cx, WEAVV CoocH ARCOMo!y’ iX'ST i WrM Buhimd Ani‘ umoer’iT , I I l irM\ OSS ■Thi‘=> ©all Be hi mo THtRe a I . . 4 F -' AV time.s am t*-v dog- does th’ v ?TEST~ CCvjPsE *TH’ Dog'll have *T' / \ wa ‘=> m e.d offemer, Bor them y * VQO HAFTA WASH Va * ' ~ . T..T.T fIIIM.YWWMCt.Mfe Ij
f fcNP TWO SNftPUNG \ us-r V ths 'Aneu. oust\ AMT, _• MV NEtkJ IS GETTIMCa WORSE. 1 FOR (K ’* ) | THOUGHT [ FIRST IT’S A LEOPARP, CHANGE,
Tarzan crept cautiously forward, deer meat being very much to his liking this morning. Noiselessly, he came within sight of Bara, drinking at a pool, too far from the nearest tree to risk a charge. The ape-man must depend upon the force and accuracy of his first arrow. Par back came his hand, and the bow, which no average man could bend, shot forth an arrow, sped by the muscles of the forest-god, straight for its target.
ately, the music stopped. The dance was ended. "Would 'ja like something to cat, baby?” Inquired her partner. "No, thank you,” Ellen murmured. She had managed to put half a dozen steps between them by the timq Larry reached her. “I can't stay a minute.” he said | quickly, reaching out to claim her 1 cold hands. "I had that note of your this afternoon. It’s all a lot of nonsense. I won’t let you throw me down like that.” "Maybe you’ll have to.” she nad begun when he pulled her. half re-
OUT OUR WAY
sisting, out on a rain swept balcony. To the left the lights of Broadway flared and subsided and flared again. Below, like shining wet beetles, taxicabs rushed to and fro and honked discordantly. "Under the coping," he told her. "and you'll not get wet. I had to talk to you a minute—alone. Wc can t use the time fighting because mother s waiting in a cab downstairs. So you’ll have to postpone till tomorrow telling me what a black-hearted villain I’ve been. (To Be Continued)
—By Edgar Rice Burrough:
A single twang and Bara collapsed upon the ground. The ape-man ran to it and as he stooped to lift the carcass to his shoulder there came a thundering bellow almost at his right elbow. Looking quickly in the direction of the sound, there broke upon his vision such a creature as may possibly have existed in the earth's infancy, but which no other living white man had ever seen—a gigantic creature, vibrant? with mad rage, that now charged, bellowing, upon him.
PAGE 15
—By William^
—By Blossei
—By Crane
—Bv Small
—By Martir.
