Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 65, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 July 1932 — Page 11
JULY 2fi, 1032
L|OVE^MONEYI°a>t P - _ —_■_ : 4-- f 1 ..tott-—c;(g)>933 By yci stfmctm
RF.OIN HERE TODAY MONA MORAN, who support* her ITiothrr. invalid father. slaier KITTY, and nr er-<lo-*ell brother BUD, U determined lo marry for wealth and position. She i receptionist for a Wall S'reel U* firm nd In the off ire see* men of the or.d to which ti’-r **p;rrMona < hiotr.rr announces that her Childhood .swirthrai .STEVE BACCARKLM grandson of the ;rc and coal dealer. hr returned home. f-teve d.'opp-arcd three year* earlier and it : .< rumored he was in prison, though Mona never believed thu. She meets him on her wav to work one mommy Stp’. r is handaome. well dressed, and well rcanr:r:rd Mona docs not wish to renew the friendship, but accepts his Invitation to dinner. Later in the day she meets BARRY TOWNSEND, rich and socially prominent t The truth about fit'-e is that he had been Invohcd with Riinystera three years earlier, but bioke with them and hBS Bone -traicht since With no thought of impropriety, but wanting Mona to look her prettiest, he huv< her a gown and wrap. She find’ them in her room that night and final!’ deride- to wear tiiem. NOW (.() ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER SIX QTEVE hart pressed the boll throe C 5 tunny, paused and then twice more. His old .signal. He sat in the lean, low-swung car, gloved fingers drumming on its wheel and hummed softly. H is eyes were intent on the dark, dingy little entrance of the apartment house. He had not parked immediately In front of the door. Mrs. Casey's w indow commanded too fine a view’ of the entrance. Too fine a view of •'that. Wop, Steve in a big car. sitting there for all the wurrld like a swell.” There was a dim light in the hall. The door opened, closed softly and swiftly. Steve could see the narrowing erack of light, vanish above some one's head. Only Mona's Juair could gleam with such a halo! He must learn to call her Mona now. As she came into view’, the glow of the street light touching her gently, he almost gasped. This childhood pal of his was beautiful! She was more than that. The girl who came tow’ard him was regal her head smartly smooth, h"r high fur collor white as drifted . snow, her carriage gracious. Mona, moving toward him in that silent street, might have been a young queen. ‘‘Get out of sight and ear shot.” she whispered when Steve was about to swing out of his seat, to assist her. She climbed swiftly in beside him. ‘‘Now drive like the fiend you are. and let's cheat the Caseys! I'm planning to tell you what I think of a young man who sends ar-
BY BRUCt CATTON EVERY school boy, naturally, i knows that the Pilgrim fathers landed at Plymouth Rock In 1620 and that, they contrived to found a permanent colony after a terrific struggle. He knows, too. that some of them had lived for a time in Holland because of their search for religious freedom, and that none of them could get, along in England because of their refusal to submit to the established church there. But few of us know any more nbout it than that. The htiman values involved, the sufferings and hardships and years of mental stress that the Mayflower expedition involved for the men and women and children concerned —these things we only can imagine. We get a look at them, now, in "We Bcgn,” a novel by Helen Grace Carlisle, which is Ane of the brightest spots of the summer season. The author centers her attention chiefly on three people—an English farmer, his wife and his brother, who form an odd triangle in the Mayflower’s passenger list. The whole story is presented from their varying points of view. One brother sees in the new world n chance to “get ahead,’’ to farm broad acres and establish his fortunes. The other sees it through the eyes of a religious bigot. The wife sees it with alternate hope and despair. By looking at it with them, we And the story vested with anew richness and clarity. "We Begin’’ is n first-rate novel. Published by Harrison Smith, it is the July choice of the Book League of America.
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ticles of attire to his young women friends.” The car glided forward, but S Steve's eyes were on Mona. He approved of her. Three years before she would have said “gentleman" and “lady friends.” “Well, you liked them, didn't you?” Steve asked. “You looked i like a million dollars as you came j through that door. ‘Steve,’ I says ! to myself ‘is it Gloria Swanson? No. It's only that homely Moran girl!'” Mona laughed in spite of herself. It had occurred to her that since I she was wearing the gown Steve had sent she hardly could be harsh with him. She should have sent them i back with a reproving note. “I feel like a million,” she acknowledged. “Maybe l looked it. but ! the door didn't, Steve. Nothing , like it. And I belong behind that 1 door. I'm playing Cinderella tonight only because—well, because I thought it would please you.” “It does please me,” returned Steve sincerely. “It so happened,” Mona went on precisely, as though he had not spoken, “that Mother had sent my one and only evening gown to Alice S’o married Jim Halliday, you know’, and lives up in the Dyckman section. I wore these because I had to, but they'll go back tomorrow.” “After you've worn them?” Steve j asked, a twinkle in his eye, yet with 1 I mock severity. a a a MONA smiled serenely. “You should see the prayer books and theater programs we've pulled ! out of ‘unworn’ returns at Pil- ; grim's,” she averred. Steve did not reply immediately. Then he laid a gloved hand over her i own and spoke softly. - “Listen, Honorable Remember the j Christmases when all I gave you | was a candy box with holly on it or some 10-cent store perfume? Well, those days are over and I'm making up for it. “Today (he could not quite keep pride out of his voice) those duds you're wearing don’t mean any more to me than the pound of candy did j-. other days.” “But it's the spirit of the thing, the spirit behind the box of candy, Steve. It isn’t the cost.” “Okay. Then it's the spirit be hand that handful, of clothes and not their value. So that's that!” It w’as not that at all, but -Mona decided on silence. She'd take the clothes back tomorrow and with Lottie's help see that they w’ere received. “I know you'd feel—well, just , right—in my rig Pilgrim picked for j you. We almost had every dress in | the place on the model before I found just the right one!” “You went yourself, Steve? Did i you see Lotttie?” But Lottie had not been in evidence. Probably she was resting up for tonight’s date. Frequently Lottie strained her long connection with Pilgrim’s to what Mona thought must be near the breaking point. It was just as w’ell that Steve hadn't seen her. Lottie had liked Steve, even when he was penniless. Now’ that he w’as apparently wealthy, she might make a play for him. Mona thought, smiling a little, that nothing would endear Steve to her quite so much as Lottie's making that play. A shaft of jealousy shot through her and she laughed rgain. Jealous! Did that mean she w’as falling for old Steve and abandoning her plan | to marry a man of wealth and posi- | tion? Someone like Barry Townsend? They were moving through the park now’, driving slowly, and Mona enjoyed it. Too often she had walked (for lack of carfare) through that same park. It was luxury indeed to ride in costly furs, beside a handsome young man in such -a car! “I want to take you where we can have dinner and dance. I frant I to take you to the best night club ■in town. I’m so sick of loneliness and heat I can't see straight. I—” "New York is full of girls, Steve.” Mona tried to make her voice disi couraging. | /'lt's not full of girls like you!" SUDDENLY he put his arm about her—they were in a deserted | section of the park—and drew her |to him. He kissed her, kissed her afcain and again. 1 “When I think of you working
so hard, and that brother of yours not helping—” Steve’s voice was trembling. “Lord, Min, I’ve been making money! Let me stand behyid you if you need me. It must be tough going, Min, lots of times. Mast of the time!” Mona thought of the rent, the Insurance, her father’s small fee at the hospital, the quarters Bud borrowed and the bills handed every Saturday to Ma. who stretched them j somehow to last through the week. She thought of days when she had gone without lunch, pretending she had gained two pounds the week before and was fasting to keep slim. Then she thought of the ermine ! cloak she was wearing. She thought of *what Mrs. Casey would say to Mrs. Callahan if she caught sight 1 of it. And she thought of Steve's ‘ kisses. She could npt admit—even to i herself—that she had wanted Steve ito kiss her. No. she had merely | endured those caresses. I Steve's sincerity was unmistakable. It would have been cheap to \ take offense. He was her childhood friend and. as in the old days ;he had brought her apples or ■ oranges, now he was sharing his I good fortune with her. Still, it wasn't to be thought that i this could lead to anything more
CONTRACT BRIDGE as the EXPERTS PLAY IT - 1 BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge league SACRIFICE bidding plays an important part in contract bridge. An unusually interesting sacrifice hand came up in the recent AllAmerica contract pair championship. North and South are vulnerable and East and West not vulnerable.
r J 1 H AQ-J-10-9-3-2 ¥2 ♦ A-K-J *A-10-4 ttii tZT 410-6- 2 S IT 4-3 5 H 4 9-2 Jf, K-8 Dealer +9-7-5-SOUTH 3-2 1 +A-K-5-4 V K-5 ♦ Q-8-7-5 + Q-J-6
The Bidding South, the dealer, opened the bidding wdth one spade, West passed, and North bid four spades. Under the one over one system, this is a slam try. - East passed. South bid four no trump. North w r ent to six spades and now’ East, who was not vulnerable, decided to try for a sacrifice and bid seven hearts, which was doubled. The Play South opened the king of spadea, which East trumped. The declarer was forced to lose tw’O diamonds and two clubs, and his contract was defeated four tricks for a minus score of 600 points, but this W’as an especially low’ minus, as the South or North hands easily could make six spades. Due to the different systems of contract bidding used, it W’as peculiar to note that at some tables South played the hand at six spades, while at other tables North played it at .six spades. No opening can defeat six spades. If North were to play the hand, and East opened a club, seven odd can be made as the losing heart can be discarded on the long diamond. • CoDvrisrhf. 1932. NEA Service. Inc.)
fTKKEftS RATATALABETE TELECTTLTLTT Out of the above letters, see if you ran form four six-letter words in which the last five letters are the same and in the same order. Yesterday’s Answer TDEOAALE I 1 1 I aheLbl6d Dotted lines between the two Tines of letters indicate the four letters that were switched, to spell ADELAIDE, m the upper line, and THEOBALD, in the lower line.
TARZAN AND THE ANT MEN
—— ”” 111 ^ — lii I
In the quarries, Tarzan and his fellow slaves worked steadily. The fact that troubled him mast now was the stature of these people. They were no pygmies, but men as large as the average European. He knew they were Veltolismakusians, and it puzzled him.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
serious. She wouldn't spoil his evening by telling him that now, though. Steve's eyes were fastened on the strip of asphalt head, the glittering panorama of the city, the pyramids of lighted dots reaching into the sky. The car swerved, veered again and plunged down another highway toward Columbus Circle. n m Dexterously Steve swung the car between a pile of cobble stones and a rope hung with red lights. The Broadway, gloomy in the automobile section, but bright and garish in the lower forties. He said, “I am going to take you to the Halcyon Club.” Mona knew the Halcyon Club. It had opened recently and was at the moment one of New York's most
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
nllT Vfli\ rAii 60 aJqvJ !—' Tt-fis ikiSTiTui-TiAAI iS <T VcU ARE ALL RtfiH-Tf J it HglDiMCi-fHA -X MAsi HqcPl£ S / , -iV.'kIKS 1 JORKiNiG Tor WE WILL HOLD f ” ‘. J A/ES-TiOA-fiOkS f —OF COURSE! / l MAtfAH HWPLE { fiToEKMoR'TOAi WE HAD Him t-ALMV _ j RE —v is verv wEAtrrwv, ' \ gooVjess— SO GFTEiJ HE OOES OFF H<S j \ aeTll Havje / Hick’S He IS-THE cWiEF of f f -To <3O-tell 0/raal gaasg of crook's f J v H ' iS vorFe '•' /a s he has s-TbLeid famous
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
I'M Go lUS TD SEE Tj f 'KHAT kIUD OF ) B£ A <o ( YOU HATE YOURSELF, DOUT ) SURE.' SEE THAT CAR, 1 (YOU MEAN TO TELL ME V —1 f IP 1 CAW FIMD OUT / AHI IMVESJTIOM j SREaT AS AWY- YOU? CAN'T yt>U TELL /<So\U' TWEPS? AN ENGINE THAT YOO COULD MAKE j r VWHAT IT 16 THAT ABE -XX) MAkIU; ) THING THOMA 6 A FELLA V-'HAT MAKES IT <SO, DOESN’T IT J 5 AN' AUTO THAT 'JiOOLD J' 1 ‘ * EppaRENTLY' OSCAR. SAYS ME'S J OSCAR ? EDISON EVER L. IT IS ? y— VJELL-.TH' CAR I'M INVENTIK/’ RUN \jJITHOUT A J ALL you t A 10... 05cAR S MOT-OP V/ y ' \ v LAU6HED at Roesar - _ . . . .....
WASHINGTON TUBBS II
(DWO WWTEtI no TITLES! twkts tkeV sStiMlllt SKWVLB'S VMIIOSOPWY. WFS NOT ACTUALW CRAZV. M V II Vlt'S AN UNSCRUPULOUS OLP RASCAL, GREEbV wM'ili ! *( V P' 'y\ Lfe. RtfT *we MTtWVT To MASSAtR£ , njUVASSFFICiERS MAS FAILED, ms.'f NRt EARR.'CAVtR in the. hzlo, well armed \ WIITN HKTC.METS VIACTING. J
SALESMAN SAM
r wtce BAse.eALus,' Dom'tbe pish ''l f are Sou' people gowma sTamd fer t*saT? /whc'e. we*’r ? THßee shoTs at ■fk' 5 *7 —n Vft WHAT V'LU Do! t'U_ LOAM VA THESE BALLS,iHRee 810 Ba3V FER A IXITt ©V <3<x)c> ol £ari_ AVepiLU.THe THaT BUfAI FeR Five cemTs-Them Na kin use. Ver OWkl
BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES
y . AV4 GEL ,'PETE. —VOOT?E A CHM-AP ,MO OO VOO STYuV ■ I \ AVMAYS TOOUVi' VOO ALWAV& WBJfc \ WHtU , ?EEA_ THAT WAV'* WAVY. VOO WET HOVL , A IQM6 T\ME ( AGO,' . M -M t. ... ..... OMl' .V
They spoke of having captured him in the battle. They called him Zuanthrol, the Giant, yet they were ns large as he! It was all seemingly impossible. Contemplation of it only tended to confuse him more; so he gave up all attempts to solve the mystery.
advertised supper clubs. The music was the best, the dance floor excellent, and the food (incredible for a night club!) appetizing. They left the car in the shadow’s of the side street into which Steve had guided it and walked the few yards to the supper club door. The doorman recognized Steve and answered his greeting effusively, springing to hold the swinging doors apart. Mona and Steve walked down thickly carpeted steps ihto the tiny foyer lined with mirrors. Then through more swinging doors toward the insinuating murmurs of the orchestra. It w’as easy to see that Steve was delighted to be able to bring Mona here. The admiring glances of the men they passed, the speculative,
envious glances of the women were no new experience for Mona, but ; they gratified her escort. Their table was near th* space ! cleared for dancing. Mona tossed j the priceless cloak from her shoul- • ders and emerged like a sea nymph ! in her sea green frock. Tike it?” asked Mona boldly as Steve's eyes registered the answer to her query. She went on, “Little | thing I picked up this afternoon. Picked up in my room where it had no—business—to-be!’ She emphasized the last four words with little stabs of her finger in the air. She was flirting with him! tt was safe enough here, where he could not kiss her again. Steve's eyes, however, turned away and searched the room specu- | latively. "I'm expecting my part-
—By Ahern
/ J ! ! [ _ -a TVVEM \M EOT?. WDMS. \M TH MOteMVM ,9ETE —■ j ( T6ET RS.AEN’. MOO VOVLOH) M’E \M A COOPV’L Cff i \ q , r. . i'i. in..-• - ....
He hoped and believed the day would come when the means of escape would offer Itself. When the long working day at last drew to a close the slaves were conducted to their quarters. These were closed and barred, and watched by two vtorriors.
ner," he explained. Steve stopped short. “Great Guns, look who’s here!” he exclaimed. (To Be Continued) ZION CITY BANS BUSSES Sunday Service Petition Denied When Voliva Objects. Ry T'nilfd Vr** t ZION CITY. 111, July 26.—Zion City, which prohibits smoking every I day in the week and a great many other activities on Sunday, will continue to have no bus service. A petition of the North Shore railroad to allow its busses to stop here Sundays was denied upon the objection of citizens, led by Wilbur Glenn Voliva, who believes the earth is flat.
OUT OUR WAY
( VIES VJHOT? H9.S V KJO- BoT \ / 4BS SoH, \ j "ATRminT Tt> CCMSERv/E] A SUjM j / I’ve. NcTCE© \ / SOvaE. O' TH' @EC|<jT>V / OCmT MEAM ! / TAt-T? FO 1 O' TrVCi-O nm&.<=T ’’ ? / NCTTrW Tb l ( A 1 n 1 WELL ; I DCMf CALL SOM£ PeoP\-T-\ BtAuTW, |h kiu t <) \ -yue POST'S Am’ / iTs GOT Tb | htH GoT ' rafcy 1 \ barbed wire. /pt a Padlock | -ro make.- rT i| — -Wf \ \ERV PEAUTiCUL/ , O' Tmf.sE. ‘ (jUW VN'FA j fc) IS"' fT f [*tbußTS (‘a* I A FTMCE, j u yTB PAPICCK^/ HES u s P>T orr " BUAOF/ DOCTOR „ ~T? ,v ..r* Acavrt. me. f-ZL
frh WAT’S MORE, THEY HAVE ALL THE FOOpN {/ 1 bt&l WIAN MINUTE TO V uJC Wand (MATER. Fie SKIPPER. IS ALARMED. / TURN OVER EE MONEY and v**avV*al
TALLULAH OUT OF LUCK Health Too Good While Working; It’s Bad on Vacation*. Ry United Prr** HOLLYWOOD. July 2.- Tallulah Bankhead just hasn’t any luck. A alight cold would have been : welcome during recent days of j work. It would have been an ex- ! cuse for a little time off. Miss Bankhead's health remained perfect. Then she went on her vacation. . Back in Hollywood today from Santa Barbara, she complained that as soon as her vacation started, so did a cold. Soviet Union plans to build the world's largest copper producing < plant In eastern Siberia.
—By Edgar 'Rice Burroughs
He found himself In a huge chamber where probably five hundred other Slaves of both sexes were gathered in little groups beside charcoal fires over which the women were preparing food. Light came from a half dozen large candles standing upon the floor. f
PAGE 11
—By Williams
—By Blosser
—By Crane
—By Small
—By Martin
