Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 37, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 April 1935 — Page 7
APRIL' 23, 1935
Air Stewardess
BEGIN* HERE TODAY Disappointed in a love affair wl’h Bart Kalaton. a brilliant young doctor, Irena Gardner ge* a position as stewardess on an air Ur.e out of Ban Francisco. B'eeilr.g her heart against *ll men. she decides that the oniy way to play with love without being hurt ii to flirt and forget. She ia genuinely fond of Stephen Reagan, however, even though his casual conversation about hia sister Peggy, whom Bart is going to marry, causes Irene many a hear - ache When Irene is efficiently ministering to the plane passengers, however, all her petty troubles slip away. Life in the air la glorloua. But she finds that the pilots *nd co-pilots are only human. Barney O Sullivan, a merry Irish pilot, teases her about being hard-hearted Hannah. ' and impudently kisses her Just to prove that it can be done Irene likes him. and ia amazed to find that kiss so thrilling, but decides to show him he can t get awav with it. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER SIXTEEN TOO late, much too late to carry her point, Irene said, ‘ You mustn't act like this." "Like what?" the pilot inquired guilelessly. Tears of annoyince gathered in her eyes as she realized the full extent of her own culpability. Alter all the plans she had made and the Imaginary conversations they had held on the subject, she had again meekly surrendered to the resistless force of his lips. What was the matter with her? "There is a look in your eyes,” Barney said gently, "like a nimbus cloud over the Sierras." She felt dazed. Suffocated. As if the mere effort of breathing were too much. His moments of tenderness were so different from his usual mocking manner—so infinitely sweet and exciting, but an instant later he might be teasing her. Os course it didn't mean anything to either of them. It could not, when she scarcely knew him. She
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had seen him only once before this flight to San Diego. Her attitude in the affair was not only inexplicable but weak-minded, and the sooner she put an end to this uncanny power he had over her, the better. She would give it a death blow right now. No matter if in striking at him she hurt herself. She wasn't going to let any man, pilot or otherwise, think that all he had to do was look at her and make a poetic remark about a “nimbus cloud” to have her tumble into his arms. So she sat very erect and, gazing straight ahead of her, said, “You are suffering from a delusion.” Barney lighted a cigaret. "In what way?” he asked amiably. "You seem to . v I want to be kissed.” "You do, darlin’, ” he assured her, blowing thin puffs of smoke into the fog-soaked air. “Why not be her. est about it? All this hard-hearted line of defense mechanism which doesn't mean a thing so far as I am concerned.” "Do you mean that I am pretending?” “Not consciously,” he admitted. “But subconsciously you want to be loved.” “Not by you,” she said cruelly. He looked at her and smiled. “You couldn't kiss me like that and be in love with any one else.” “I don't know why I should discuss it with you,” she said, frowning. "But I was under the impression that it was you who were doing the kissing.” “Then you’re wrong again,” he cried, triumphantly. “Because it takes two to make any kiss worth the taking.”
“I shouldn't have to make it any plainer to you,” the girl said, exasperated. “I want you to let me aione.” He stared at her coolly. “All right! I promise not to kiss you again until you want me to.” Irene opened the door of the car and cumbed out. “I might have known you would not be serious about it. I like you, Harney! I had hoped that we might oecome good friends.” He jumped out after her and they stood in a little fog-shrouded world of their own. “I want to be friends with you, too,” he declared, “and I don’t see why we shouldn t kiss each other.’’ Ashamed to admit that his kisses were too potent for her, Irene said nothing. “Wnat's a kiss between friends?” he continued. “You said yourself that the first one had no significance. If it hadn't why argue about it?” He sounded more serious than he had at any time during their conversation, but she was not at all certain even now that he was not laughing at her. And as she turned toward the airport he began to whistle. He had succeeded in making her appear completely ridiculous. The only way to regain her dignity was to stay entirely out of his way. This, unfortunately, could not be done when she was to ride in planes whi:h he was flying. But at least she could avoid being alone with him. n a tt SHE was still holding firmly to this thought when the plane started for San Francisco. Because of the delay, many of the passengers had canceled their reservatons. There were only three business men and a middle-aged couple. Irene, scanning their faces, noticed that they looked tired. "We’re on our way home,” the woman confided when Irene took their tickets. "We've been visiting friends and it’s been one long round of parties.” "Shall I bring you a pillow? Perhaps you can sleep.” "I hope I can. We’ve just come from a luncheon and I'm a wreck.” She took off her hat and leaned against the pillow gratefully while her husband said, “I'm not feeling so good myself.” Irene left them comfortably settled, but when she glanced at them a few moments later the woman looked so distressed that the air hostess hastened to her. “I'm afraid I'm going to be 111,” she confessed. “I didn’t feel very well when we got on.” Her face was drawn and pasty, and her husband said, “I feel worse, too. Do you think it can be the motion of the plane?” "It isn’t as rough as usual,” Irene reminded them. “Are you sure you didn’t eat something which might be disagreeing with you?” Both spoke at once. "It may have been the lobster,” they said. Irene brought the customary mild remedies which were usually sufficient in cases of air sickness, but both passengers became rapidly worse. With the help of the co-pilot, she moved them to the rear of the plane and applied such emergency treatment as was possible, but they were showing definite symptoms of arsenic poisoning and Irene alarmed. When she was free for a moment, she went to the cockpit and asked Barney to radio ahead for the doctor whose name they had given her. But she was afraid they might not live to reach San Francisco. Never had a trip seemed so long and filled with apprehension, but when they reached the airport, 20 minutes ahead of time, an ambulance and their own physician were waiting for them. In the stress of circumstances, Irene had forgotten all about her quarrel with Barney until he said, “You were wonderful.” "You were pretty wonderful yourself.” she admitted, "getting them up here 20 minutes ahead of time.
Stories in | j STAMPS I BOSNIA and Herzegovina, provinces under control of Aus-tria-Hungary to the end of the World War, and now part of Yugoslavia. issued two stamps in 1918 that seem like grim jokes of a warlike nation. While showing pictures of a wounded soldier, and of a blind soldier being led by a child, these stamps are designated as “military postage.” The designs were reissued in two different values in 1918. d It was at r T.wr/g i Seralevo, cap- ! a4**‘Fy * ital of Bos'H§ Jr" ||S; | nia, where !H| "VI (x §|i j the Archduke ' Prt yf i||§ J dinand and l ip I f l 38* ! the arch- ’ j duchess were ’ ] slain in 1914 i if^SSS ; J the wor J and War. (CoDvrieht. 1935. NEA Service. Inc.) LOOK tour face! Wrinkles, Age Lines, Moles, Warts. Pimples, Superfluous Hair, Bad Complexions and Facial Defects corrected. Send for booklet. C. R. Per Due, M.D. 411 State Life Bldg. Established Here SO Years
By_ VIDA. HU_RjST Copyright, 1935, By Register-Tribune Syndicate.
In cases like theirs every minute counts, you know.” She called the hospital that night and was told that they were still very ill, but the next day the doctor telephoned that, thanks to her skillfull treatment, they were going to recover. t> a a THE knowledge that together Barney and she had saved two lives made her strangely happy. Twice they had shared danger and responsibility and both times she had found him capable. She knew by now* that to be a good pilot a man must have integrity and steadfastness. He must be conservative but also able to meet an unexpected crisis. These qualities, Barney had proved that he possessed and she admired him for them, even though she had made up her mind to see as little of him as possible. For a week this was not difficult to do as his headquarters were in Los Angeles and his days est were spent there. Also, she did not happen to be on his plane. Meantime, she went out with Stephen and was compelled to hear about Bart, who had finished his interneship and had started work in Dr. Reagan’s office. "Father is so tired,” Stephen said, “he’s going to Alaska as soon as Peggy and Bartlett are married.” Bartlett was tired, too, and if he had married her they could have gone to Yosemite for the vacation he needed. But that would not happen now. Irene could foresee how his youth and vitality would constantly be sacrificed to save the failing strength of the older man. Bart’s future was cut out for him and it was his own choice. But it was a hard, relentless creed which forced a doctor to deny himself of many of the things other men took for granted. She preferred aviation. Its danger and thrills. But she loved Bart. She told herself she must love him, although, when she closed her eyes at night, it was no longer his face she saw, but the gaily impudent, infinitely tender features of an Irish pilot. (To Be Continued.* DANCERS CHOSEN FOR BUTLER FETE Miss Louise Schulmeyer, director of dancing for the 1935 Butler University May Day pageant, has announced the names of 38 co-eds who will comprise the dancing choruses for the performance. The celebration will be held May 25 on the Fairview campus. An old English pageant will bo presented. Dancers will be Misses Dorothy Shepperd, Ruth Cradick, Mary Jane Laatz, Suzane Merrill, Mary Slupesky, ‘ Rosemary Byrket, Jean Knowlton, Harriet Jane Holmes, Ruth Brinkman, Julia Raymond, Nina Sherman, Quintila Morris, Mary Watson, Rosemond Baker, Betty Ann Jones, Barbara Ballinger. Marjory Hennis, Martha Coddington, Jeanne St. Pierre, Eleanor Fullenwider, Jesse Levin, Verna Pickerel, Joy Dickens and Mary Lou Carpenter. Others are Misses Mary Elizabeth Kalb, Catherine Heard, Phyllis Smith, Marjorie Zechiel, Louise Edwards, Barbara Jean Holt, Margaret Rohr, Martha Parrish, Helen Jane Lowry, Jane Bosart, Helen Hicks, Margaret Trager, Cecilia Kupperschmidt and Madaline Trent.
SHOWER GIVEN FOR BRIDE-TO-BE
Mrs. August Hook was hostess last night at a linen shower at the home of Mrs. John A. Hook, Crows Nest, in honor of Miss Doris Hair, whose marriage to Earl Grimsley will take place next Saturday at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Hair. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. Hook and her aunt, Mrs. Sophia Streeter. Guests included Mrs. Kuhrman Stephens, Lawrence; Mrs. Hair, Mesdames Lula De Vaney, Russell E. Clift, Gregg Ransburg, T. R. Johnson, Fred Cheney, Norman Baxter, Guy Dixon and Robert Tope; Misses Mary Margaret Hill, Regina Funderburg, Winifred Cassell, Betty Sahm, Charlotte Twittv, Jeanne Winchel and Margaret Hair.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Hobby Show Taken Over by Antiques More Suitable Collections Missing From Display in New York. BY HELEN WORDEN Times Special Writer NEW YORK, April 23.—The recent hobby show held at the Pennsylvania Hotel was more of an antique market than a hobby rider's paradise. Nine out of ten booths which crowded the big ballroom, were filled with early American furniture, old documents, ancient dolls, Dutch churns, Currier & Ives prints, colonial glassware and hand-woven coverlets. Fascinating as these things were, I wish that more unusual exhibits had been featured. If the committee in charge had gone round ringing doorbells, it might have brought some odd hobbies to light. If the committee had called on Ernest Hutcheson, dean of the Juilliard, he might have consented to show his collection of microscopic studies. Mr. Hutcheson, has a passion for examining through a fine microscope, the details of flower petals, butterfly wings, snow crystals, or whatever else that come along, and then making notes of his oi nervations. Proud of Tackroom Society’s most famous turfman, Ambrose Clark, could have added a picturesque touch by exhibiting the contents of his tackroom taken from the stables on his Long Island estate. The hard-riding stepson of the late Bishop Potter, and heir to the Singer sewing machine millions, owns a collection of heavy coaching harness, hand-made saddles, odd riding crops and expensive gadgets for horses, that would make a British fox-hunting squire green with envy. Mr. Clark’s guests are always treated to a tour of his tackroom. They say it was one of the first rooms shown the Prince of Wales when he visited the Clark estate at Old Westbury. I think many persons would enjoy seeing Sophie Kerr’s collection of eighteenth century snuff and scent boxes. Some are so tiny that they suggest a doll's trinket. "I believe they must have been made for little girls,” the Saturday Evening Post writer said, the day I looked over the collection at her house in Murray Hill. Treasures Bottles Virginia Elliott, niece of Ray Lee Jackson, head photographer for the National Broadcasting Cos., has gathered miniature liquor bottles from every part of the w r orld. A special shelf in her library at 12 Sutton-pl, has been built to hold the unique bottles. A booth strung with these would have been an amusing feature. Hobbies are outlets for surplus energy, says J. Thomson Willing, president of the Shakespeare Society and art editor of the Gravure Press. He snoops in second-hand stores and attics for old photographs. George Bagoe, owner of one of New* York's earliest drug stores, is another photograph fan. More than 5000 negatives and pictures are filed in a steel safe at the rear of his pharmacy at 86 Madison-av. The stamp division came second in size to the antique group at the hobby show
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Daily Recipe FROZEN* PUNCH 2 cups sugar 4 cups icater 1 cup orange juice 1 cup lemon juice 2 cups grape juice 4 cups iced tea 4 cups ice water Boil sugar and water two minutes, cool. Add rest of ingredients, and chill. Serve in glasses half filled with chopped ice. Garnish with lemon slices and mint leaves if desired.
MRS. JOHNSON WILL ADDRESS IF. C. T. U. Mrs. Epha Johnson, alcohol education director for Marion county, will be the guest speaker at a meeting of the Washington Women's Christian Temperaince Union, at 2 Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. John Foster, 105 S. Neal-av. Mrs. Herbert Benson, union president will be in charge of the meeting.
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State Lodge Meeting Set for Two Days Order of Eastern Star to Convene Tomorrow at the Murat. Fifteen hundred delegates and 1200 visitors will be in Indianapolis tomorrow and Thursday to attend the 61st annual session of the Indiana Grtrid Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star, to be held at the Murat Theater. Mrs. Hazel Thompson Coats, worthy grand matron, Veedersburg. will preside during the meeting. Opening ceremonies, addresses of the grand officers and reports are scheduled for tomorrow morning. The afternoon will be taken up with election of officers and a business session. Tomorrow night membmers of the order will witness the exemplification of degrees by the grand officers and a memorial service. This service will be preceded by a banquet in
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A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Baked rhubarb and bananas. creal. cream, scrambled eggs. crisp toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon—--9 Asparagus in crusty rolls, radishes and celery, filled cookies, lemonade. Dinner — Planked pork chops with apples, potato marbles in parsley butter, spinach and egg salad, canned peaches, nut loaf. milk, coffee.
| the Egyptian room of Murat Tem- ■ pie. j Mrs. Frances Haun, Nashville, Tenn., most worthy grand matron of ! the General Grand Chapter, will be I guest at the dinner, as will William A. Duvall. Branchville, Md., most worthy grand patron. Thursday’s meeting will be taken up with reports and installation of 1935-1936 officers, while at night the eighth annual memorial ball will be held in the Egyptian room. More than 5000 are expected for this event.
