Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 September 1946 — Page 23
Day
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A THRILLING TIMES SERIAL— :
Devil s jk
THE STORY: I, Cecelia Hart, was only | 17 when I came to Innisfail that eventful | sme to help, out Cousin Elléb, who was the Fitzgeralds’ housekeeper. Auto-] cratic old Honora Fitzgerald, who ruled | the household from a sick bed, frightened me but the friendliness of lovely Chatloite Brent and Professor Mark Fitzge: | whom she was engaged, did mach to he my homesickness. Then Colin Fitzgerald | came home and everything else paled be- | side his ‘magnetic charm. That first eve- | ning, though, I noticed that he and Mark | did not get along, And I saw that Colin was very much aware of Charlotte's | beauty, How exciting it was to be at | Innisfail, I felt, now that Colin Fitzgerald had come home,
| | CHAPTER ELEVEN |
,THE MORNING after the storm | was glorious, the sky vivid blue and | cloudless, the air soft, with just | enough breeze. to tickle the leaves jon the sugar maples. I felt so ex(hilarated that I was inspired to {quote Lowell at breakfast time to | Cousin Ellen. “‘Ah, what is so rare as a day in |June?'” I said soulfully, Ellen said as far as she was con{cerned, she hoped June days like |the one we had yesterday would be {good and rare, they couldn't be rare lenough for her. She hadn't slept one single wink during the storm. There were some,
[she said,
that could sleep through
thunder and lightning but she wasn't one of them. ‘And now with July coming in two more days, we'd probably have plenty of Vrnder Storms; .
THEN SHE "aia ona to ap-
prove of today. It was a , good drying day. We would get at thé table cloths and napkins as soon as breakfast was over-and get them hung out inthe sunshine, Colin, it seemed, had already eaten his breakfast with his mother and Ellen had also brought Miss Charlotte's tray to her, so there would just be the one breakfast to take in to the dining room to the Professor. : Mark, buried in the paper, as usual, said, “Thank you, Ellen,” ab- | sently, and I realized that for the! moment he had forgotten that there was a new maid here at Innisfail, » " ” I CAME upon Mark again a little later, when I went to hang out the! table linen in the clothes yard, a fenced off square close beside his old-fashioned garden, He loathed the formal gardens over by the living room, with their geometric designs - and marble bénches, prune for hours here in his own spot where later in the summer! there would be a mixture of all kinds of blooms and where already the roses were starting to blossom on his new bushes, He was kneeling there no pairing the damage that the mil had done and Miss Charlotte was
beside him. They did not, of course, |
notic® me. ~ = » HE'S NEVER done one stroke of work in all the twenty-five years of his life,” Mark was saying. “Perhaps he'll start working now,” Charlotte said. he's had his fling.” “T doubt it very much, Charlotte. I asked him what he intended to do and he said let the poor devils
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{should he stand in their way?”
who need work take the jobs. why
Mark dug in silence for a moment. then he added, “The trouble is he’s always had everything too easy. He took .a good share of his inheritance—money my father left him—and went blithely off to see the world for himself as soon as he finished college.” “Well, after all, it’s a wonderfull thing to be able to see the world, ! Mark. Don’t you ‘think so?” » = = “OF COURSE I do. But that fellaw hasn't a thought for anyone! but himself. His concern for my mother after all this time is ironic, | to say the least. And look at the
.| Way he’s treated Beatrice Harring-
ton. TI doubt if she's heard from
him five times in the three years!
since he put the ring on her finger, vet he’s gone over there today as sure of a welcome as though he'd! been there yesterday. Why in heaven's name she's waited for him all this time I don't know.” ® = “DON'T You, Mark?” Charlotte's voice was soft. “No, T do not. Beatrice is one of the finest girls God ever made.’ “But, Mark, darling, almost any | girl would have done the same. Colin has the most—the most—
have ever met.”
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
v 5 By Alice ‘M. Laverick
but he would dig and him Beatrice Harrington and two
“Now that!
‘not expected to change the total
potent personality of anyone 1)
A
"|INDONESIANS PLAN | “AGGRESSION' APPEAL
‘BATAVIA! Sept. 13 (U. P).—An, Indonesian socialist party congress meeting in Jog jakarta passed a res olution yesterday to ask the United
“Has he; indeed?” Nations and the international labor
“Yes, and I think you know it. I also think you love him, really, in- spite of the harsh things you say to him.” “He enrages me so, I could—ah, Charlotte, of course I love him, the ingrate. That's why I get so worked up over him. Some one of these fine days life will give him an awful jolt and he'll not be prepared for it." *Like me,” she said in a whisper. “Liké me.”
.n " » “OH, MY DEAR, my dear,” he | said, and he dropped the trowel and took her in his arms. And, quickly, I hung up the last
tablecloth and retreated to the house, still unnoticed. Cousin Ellen being nowhere In
sight, I went In to dust the library, |but had not read three chapters of |"“Henry Esmond” when she came to find me, to put me to work cleaning {the silver, | One thing conspired with another | to keep me from “Henry” that day. Cousin Ellen kept me busy ‘at this land that, and then late in the afternoon, when I might legitimately have gone into the library, Colin returned unexpectedly, bringing with
Slip Into.
Loveliness
lcars f full of other guests,
(To Be Continued)
"POLIO ON DECLINE 3D STRAIGHT WEEK
By Science Service WASHINGTON, Sept. 13 -Infantile paralysis has decreased throughout the nation for the third consecutive week. Total cases re- | ported to the U. 8. public health service here for the week ending Sept. 7, latest on which reports have | been made, were 1601, compared to 1717. Both figures exclude reports. from Missouri, which have not been received for the past week. They are
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much. Largest number of cases were reported from Illinois, 199; Minnesota 189, and california, 146. These rll represent decreases. Largest Increase was reported from New York, | where cases jumped from 89 to 101. This figure is not considered large {for a state with New York's population. Increased newspaper publicity, health authorities here believe, may account for the apparent increase in polio during the past four years | The greater attention given the | disease in newspapers may have re- | sulted in cases being reported which {in ‘previous’ years would not have |
AUSSIES WANT TO | JOIN U. S. ARMY
| TOKYO, Sept. 13 (U. P.).—Three Lingerie, Fourth Floor
Australians, members of the British commonwealth occupation forces, yesterday sought to learn how they | could join U. 8. army forces when | their present terms are up. i The newspaper Stars and Stripes, which printed the Australians’ let- | ters along with an answer telling them they had first to become American citizens, entitled the question: “The Road to Purgatory.”
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against “Dutch aggression.” {The resolution also The resolution asked the United the inernational lor ations to “take cogulzarce of the to use its “u®i08t power t peacerul policy of the republic of ‘tHe sending of Dutch troops. Indonesia and condemn the Neth-| (donesia fir order to avoid a x jerlands as an eggressor nation in/rence of the tragedy experienced order to prevent.a repetition of the the international labor labor movement: i League of Nations inaction which!in Spain”
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