Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 305, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1932 — Page 13
APRIL 30, 1932_
•u, mfln HunTCR/ $ BY MABEL McELLIOTT •/AS2 aju rrrrxt me.
RF.GI* HERE TODAY SUSAN CARET. 1 *nd prettv. work* Jn tha office of ERNEST HEATH, arthltrrt. JACK WARING. to Hrth. trii to make lova to tier. but k ffiacou raced Uuaaa 11*** with her aunt, who 1* unt< lalW atrtr*. RAY FLANNERY, fitf loved in (he nex' office make* friend* Uh Suxah and conffdea her ambition In life to marrr a rich man whether •he tovet him or not Biian U *erretlr in lore with 808 TMJNBAR, millionaire ■ aon *ha met at buxine** ichool. She hear* rumor* that he !* to marrr DENISE ACKROYD debutante. Suxan refuae* an offer of rr<rr ?je from HFK lAMPMAV. aerlou*tninded voune musician. r At a week-end party given bv TVr ice Ackrovd. Ben and Bob fight over Suxan She run* a*av from Bob and meeting St .text Heath, aiks him to take her home He e*eort* her back to the Ackrovd*. thereby arouttne h* wife'* iealmixv. A few dars later Heath informs Susan hi* wife intend* to *ue her for alienation Os hi* affection*. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT WARING ENTERED whistling. It was the morning after Sufan’ birthday. His ruddy face, under the thatch of smoothly combed, sandy hair was aglow with the consciousness of a good deed done. “I feel like a blooming Boy Scout," he chuckied to himself, throwing his heavy ulster over a chair and beginning to sort his papers. , Sutan camp in. locking as though •he had spent a bad night. "Good morning." She looked at him In surprise, astonished that any one should feel cheerful enough to call this morning good! "Don't be so woebegone," he advised, sealing himself on her desk and watching as she removed the small hat and hung away her coat In the closet reserved for that purPPie. Suddenly he remembered. "Surely you’ve heard the storm is over?' he asked incredulously. "I don't know what you mean.” He took her hands and gave her a little whirl. "I fixed everything.” he announced. "Me. the Boy Scout!” "You what?" Her face came alive. "Just what I said," the man insisted. "The danger's over and there's notning for you to worry about.” "I don't believe it.” Susan told him. but her eyes danced just the , same. "How did you do it?” Waring put up one hand and struck an attitude of mock modesty. ‘‘lt’s not a story for little girls' cars,” he told her. “Ail you need to know is that you’re safe. The alienation suit ! off." ' Then they’ve made it up?" Susan asked. "I wouldn’t exactly say that. The fact of the matter is, Mrs. Heath has decided to get a divorce instead. Avery polite, restrained, ’ dignified Reno divorce. "You mean she's—she's not going to drag me into it?” "No, not at all. Why should she?" "Oh. thank God!” "Well, you might also thank me a little,” Waring said irreverently. "I was the little fixer, after all." "I do! I think it was marvelous." She meant it. She thought she must have misunderstood this man. He seemed so kind now. He grinned, reading her thoughts. * "Do you think I can keep my job, or will it be too awkward?" Susan asked. * Awkward for whom? No one | knows anything about it but the!
HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous 'Puzzle Annies in the France during >4 ilrle■ T|R AM |TMb|a|t E l 2 P ° UD<I the World War aSSaBBEEHEtEIgL § 13 Same as N. S. called the man LjL MPUA v . , . w of peace. BAHlßiffßgEgpia i!£ n f o .£ •*Te deprive of g, SKr'SS* - hrarinp. D- W „ Lion q( 114 Spring UjSMR A TEIA P A raine •• festival Pfc 24 Young hares. 15 Rranrhed §ll > N1 N g 26 Spinning toy. 16 To emulate jp |jQMM A L IpMDE VIL 28 Idiot. 17 White poplar. * S!ElJtTsMsp ]AI I TTHW 30 Relishes. 20 To perform. TfA RIE :,N;T|£ nffoolS.UEiPl 31 To moisten., 21 Foothko part 33 Feast of Lan ?2 Steadiest race of Tibet. ball ternß of Japai , 23 Oueen of the 44 Distant. "1 Having made 34 To betroth. lower world 45 Melody and left a wi,L 36 Otalgia 25 Alleged forre. 47T0 furn|sh 62 To collect. 37 Direc tor .27 l.egsl claims >new wUh VERTICAL (Abbr). 20 Second not' arma 1 To exist. 38 To crowd. SS32L "ICL -SS-X? IZSZ SSSS r in n dres 6 Fish hook. port side. “4, 51 Charactertatlc. 7 Who the To r. S i£ch hero of 57 Rcpe.i.iop o, TJnet 5““ “*■ the Mrnr In .ound by re- f 5t Alo ,hr world flection. S no.n. 5 ‘ War 55 Small hotels 0 Each. .. o ?u . -0 , <>* vulgar 56 Hattie forma 10 Wine vessel. 5S Southeast. 9 tions. 11 Commander of 59 Before Christ. 41 One of native 53 Rebound of a the Allied 60 Not < Prefix).
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HAVE YOU TRIED?. I PIG” —I For a Quick Delicious Meal “Just Heat and Eat” nl JOLLY PIG BARBECUED I PORK—BEEF—'HAM . II 'is- 15c 1 A 407 E. Wash. St. : ■ A AUtf 43 N Alabama St. sSr J I JL, • Z 2068 N. Illinois St. ME AT 2858 CUfton St. all MARKETS 11 ALL MEATS KILLED and IN OUR OWN LOCAL PLANT J/M
j three of us. We like you here. Why should you trail around town answering want ads because a Jealous woman has a brainstorm?” m > ar a PUT that way, it seemed the most simple and reasonable thing in the world. Susan drew a deep breath and held up her head again. Everything was all right She was grateful for her escape from danger and she put that gratitude into her (work. The three men in the office, iso different in background and tastes, felt the magic of her presence. The gray day was brighter because a young girl smiled at them. "You're a funny one,” Ray said again and again. "You seem perfectly happy Just to work and not have any fun.” Susan aid not try to explain the gloriou:. sense of freedom and rej lease which had come to her that morning when Waring had brought her the good news. It was enough Just to be safe and : secure. She no longer seemed impatient for good times. Ray rushed in one day at noon and said excitedly, "Have lunch with me, won't you?” Susan began to explain that she had planned to meet Rose. "Please break it. Honest, this is important." Ray urged. Her dandelion locks were ruffled and there was a streak of mascara under one eye. Could Ray have been crying? Susan dismissed the notion, but something in the other girl's air of suppressed excitement made her decide to go w ith her. "Meet you in the lobby in ten minutes," Ray threw over her shoulder. There was no real privacy to be they usually lunched, but Susan spied a small table back near the kfcchen in their pet “Sandwich had in any of the restaurants where Shoppe.” Harried waitresses brushed their shoulders with dangerously laden trays and once or twice both girls escaped a deluge of hot coffee, but | they managed somehow among the 1 clatter and steam and gabble of i tongues to achieve a small oasis of ! calm. Ray began, "Honest, Susan, it gets my goat. I'm all in a lather about it!” Susan looked her surprise. "Do you mean to say you haven't heard? Sky was married last night at Crown Point. Sent me a wire, cool as you please. 'Congratulate me.' he says.” "I didn’t know you cared anything about him,” said Susan. a a a RAY winked those preposterous lashes once or twice and her eyes were hard and bright as mar- ; blcs. "Sky was—well we were practically just like that,” she said, holding up two fingers. "What bums me up is the way he did it. Not that I would have married him myself. "Honestly, the kid hasn’t good sense, but we were out together Tuesday night dancing and he came up to the house afterward and he was just as sweet as could be.”
Susan was mystified. If Raythought Schuyler Webb hadn't good sense, why did she mind his having married someone else? Ray gabbled on. "Course, I've heard him talk about this girl all winter, but he always pretended he couldn’t see her. She has scads of money. That's the answer.” "I thought Sky was rich.” Susan murmured, feeling she ought to saysomething. "Sky? He practically lest his shirt in the market last year. His drawing account was all used up. I knew that a week ago.” "Well, then,” said Susan, remembering Ray’s oft-repeated remarks about the folly of becoming a poor man's wife. "Well, then, you wouldn’t have wanted hlia anyw-ay. You know what you’ve always said about wanting a mink coat and a duplex apartment and t. roadster." Ray tossed her head and Susan could see a tear glistening on her lashes. "A person talks,” Ray said thickly and unsteadily. "A person says a lot of things that turn out to be hooey when a person finds out what it's all about.” Susan hated to look at her. She did not need to look to know that Ray was crying openly. “I’m terribly, terribly sorry,” she said. "I didn't know you cared at all.” She was shocked beyond words at this exposure. To see Ray, so hard and bright and assured, thus shaken was a shattering experience. If this was love, thought Susan to herself, half - humorously, half--7TISCPK A DAY BY BRUCE CMTQN FOR a century and a half, historians have been wondering about the strange behavior of Sir William Howe during the Revolutionary war. Howe commanded the British forces from before Bunker Hill until shortly after Burgoyne's defeat at Saratoga. He met Washington in the field repeatedly and nearly always defeated him; and in many cases he could have crushed Washington’s army completely, and ended the war. if he had shown only a little more initiative and determination. But he never did it. Washington got his army away after Long Island and White Plains, took it across New- Jersey against long odds, and kept it in existence until, at last, the pendulum began to swing the other way. Bellamy Partridge examines Sir William’s curious conduct in anew book, “Sir Billy Howe,” and finds a simple and seemingly logical explanation. Howe, he says, was a Whig fighting in a Tory war. He never wanted to see the colonies crushed; conciliation always was his goa!, and he hoped constantly that sooner or later the colonists would realize the overwhelming power of Britain and would sue for peace. Because he sympathized with the colonists so much, he did not want the British cabinet to be able to dictate a settlement, and he tried to keep each victory from being really decisive. In plain English, he pulled his punches. "Sir Billy Howe” makes interesting reading, and offers an important new theory about the Revolution. It is published by Longmans, Green and Company, and is priced at $3.50.
STICKERS - .. ... r Using the numbers from 1 to 25, can you place them m the above squares m such a way that every line of five squares, vertical, horizontal and diagonal, will add to 65)
* Yesterday's Answer
Al PWQT WAR’ PI T RAW yp f Above are toe two ibree-lettet words J that ran be made out of the letters in the Z lop Ime, and which wiV make two other I words when read backwards. ’
TARZAN THE TERRIBLE
From the princess O-10-a, Tarzan learned that the exiled Ta-den had returned, and that they were to be married after the impending battle. Ja-don and Tarzan had decided to attack the high priest's forces under cover of the next night’s darkness. Word of this plan had been sent to Taden where his forces awaited action a few miles above A-lur. As many warriors were left to guard the women, Tarzan bade his mate good-bye with no feelings of apprehension.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
pityingly, it's somethin! to steer clear of. mam RAY dried her eyes and began to talk quickly and Irrelevantly about nothing at aIL She renewed her makeup and before they went out on the street she seemed her own. bright, slangy self. But S'isan cquld not forget the glimpse of suffering she had seen. It made her fonder of Ray* This little doll-faced person was real. What a queer world, she mused! Ray had built herself a wall of philosophy and a stupid, vapid, or-
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
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FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
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WASHINGTON TUBBS II
THE ’ASIATIC A j\/ BLAZES'. BUT cm glad to see. vou,\ REMOVES WIS RTWipa* VIiADWE. BEER LOOKING ALL OVER. \ MkSK A.NP A TRICK MUSTACHE. I KNEW tTANARUS! WASH feUIES A SHOUT Os JOY. t KUEVJ it! I jfVi
SALESMAN SAM
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BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES
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dinary young man had broken it! down. Os one thing Susan was certain. Ray would not be hurt in the same way again. The incident awoke for a while the old pain Susan had felt about Bob. She had not heard from him since that eventful night at the Ackrovd*. Where was he and what was he doing? She tried not to think of him. but in her heart knew that she dally dreaded the news of his marriage. Would she ever rid herself of this foolishness? It was like a fever, an ague.
Again seated upon the gryf, Tarzan made his way out of the city with Ja-don and his warriors. At the mouth of the gorge the apeman abandoned his huge mount, since in the darkness, the effect of his entry to the ci’.y upon the gryf would be totally lo6t. A few sharp blows sent the big animal rumbling off in the direction of the Kor-ul-gryf. Nor Was Tarzan sorry to see it depart, since be was never certain when it might turn with deadly puirose upon the Ho-don warriors.
You thought you were over it completely and then some word—some phrase—a strain of music, perhaps, would start it all over again. She shook her head impatiently. This was getting her nowhere. She would be like Ray. cool and determined and ruthless. She would put Bob out of her heart forever. Susan bent over her work, trying to efface herself in its calm impersonality. A voice said at her elbow. "May jl see Mr. Heath. Oh. I beg your 1 pardon. How do you do?”
—By Ahern
’ / HERE. MEET MY FRIENP, ULUT6MANT A AND SO YOU’RE Y Av*). THA’S FUN. . / SiMC I LO. GREAT GUY. B€£N FIGHTiWG J O’PAY.- 3 81A7.ES, FELLA, 1 ULES FIGHTINGT l AROUND SHANGHAI IN THE r - —-/l SURE HOPE THERE'S /N' MAYBE AFTER N SAME SQUADRON.I NO HARP FEELINGS / \ RESTS A BIT — ! l V OVER. OOP- UTTLE h WE KIM VAAVIE^
Pan-sat, following Lu-don's instructions, had managed to enter Ja-lur, and here he conspired with its priests to put in motion a certain deed. Pan-sat had bribed with tempting bait. It was well known that Ja-don, the chief, never attended the cruel sacrificial rites that were adhorrent to him. Hence the priests were willing to aid the messenger of the high priest of A-lur. and so it was that three warriors Joined the newcony before the door of the epe-man's slumberrig mate.
She felt shaken. Her heart pHmged frighteningly. She heard herself say calmly, “Mr. Dunbar. How do you do?” (To Be Continued) Dog Hero Reported Stolen By Vmtted Prr CHICAGO. April 30.—When officials telephoned Mrs. John K. Kelley to tell her her dog Queen had been chosen the most heroic and intelligent dog in the state, they learned the animal was missing and the dog's mistress announced she believed it had been stolen.
OUT OUR WAY
0 liGr lunK'. W PROOF \ r .SOURE I AOsiT oor o*si MV .V MiSERV- 'no SYMPATHY GARDEvU GET A FER f\ GUV *JORv<eO L LOT OF pLEA€,Oe VslHO STARTS ARO TO : OcT OF MANisi' A [ A CAB3AGE. iROVNIKI'. I 4 " MICE LAVNS4 , SOU l FARM mext* . Ii Got to fgat wnw \door to a K J” / all The Oogs, w.os,\RAßen"ranch J j ‘MiIWmEM, NEIGHBORS] L orrV- BEAUTV AMD INDUSXRV Oiw r Mv>rL me. ,
cm oa! Twtv>, oavfevtr net . cm.w** oovrr Ntpo qot ntet SX ROOT'S ? ■— WHO GQOVaI Ki 9 ?\V VOO X V "v, I OVOM-, T6tt AH*. PlttfW CW OTHTa ~ * I ** lSS ..." .. ...
NEW FIRM IS LAUNCHED Keliar. Phares & Cos. Are Local Sales Representatives. Keliar. Phares and: Cos., sale* representatives. started Us career today with M. L. Keliar as presi- : dent and W. A. Phares as vicepresident and general manager. The company will deal in office supplies and equipment, including j furniture and typewriter supplies, sales and stock books, billing machines and job printing. Offices of the company are 705 Roosevelt 1 building.
—By Edgar Rice Burroughs
Silently they lifted the hangings and alunk within. Upon a pile of furs in a far corner lay the sleeping form of Lady Greystoke. “Now!" whispered Pan-sat. standing beside her. A fur pelt was thrown over her as two men seized her arms. Quickly, silently, bound and gagged, she was hurried away. An hour after; Pan-sat was paddling with his prize down river, toward whert Lu-don, the high priest, impatiently awaflbd his arrival.
PAGE 13
—By Williams
—By Blosser
—By Crane
—By Small
—By Martin
