Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 October 1946 — Page 10
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o instructor, as conductor. The Sw meets at 7:30 p. m. Wednes-
Voy. 4
IER:
.23 twin en1. Douglas 8 liner — seats 12 passengers and patient— 40 miles per hour.
gine luxury
cruises 2
2. Beechcraft twin engine
3 ambulance plane — seats passengers and patient — 90 miles per hour.
cruises 1
ambulance plane — 3¢
115 miles per hour.
&. Morture ration (ship
ships cruise hour -n0 .
ny St CE IME SERIAL tea sponsored by the "Sh . : ! q : Rg A Hoosier art exhibit currently a e Oo ycCal 1 ore * . has been or-l;; on display in the art room of ple win . Attucks night Crispus Attucks high school. The aE TORY: ne %oltung, ang lia : 3 with La) Newsome, mu- | P.~T. A. recently was guest of the| Bart is the perfect lover and Gayle is |S€lf shopping, sweetheart,” he pro-
department and Mrs. Leonidas F. deliriously happy during their protracted tested when he came home. to the Smith, Hoosier Art salon, spoke.
———— {7 Martha Cex and Juanita Orr are Bartfelt just died. Evelyn Gill, soprano, and the At- the new R. O. T. C. sponsors at tucks string quartet performed re- Crispus Attucks high school.
a single engine .3. Stinse oh
ascort and patient —cruises
ry oir transporment of the 0 and casket by aif! = wand at 170 miles per scort necessary
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{sg
? | E. Tipton, director of girls' activities.
* | will be installed, andthe new girls |
ARN
? | Leading the council as English VII]
2 |ers are Alta Pate, Jane Petry and Louise | % | Archer. Murlene Capps, Patricia Jones : (and El ‘Vera Donner are English II 7 IM | En; ¥ | any
f° | Schwomeyer; English VI, ary Ann Mec.
% | Mrs. Florence Boots, Miss Gertrude ' | Mescall, Miss Elena Raglin, Miss Kather-
~ | M. Thornton, Miss Jessie E. Moore, Miss
-_— SERS TNR I SRNR At ARR Ses Ss
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——
RARER
more people have been enjoying the extra ben-
_ PENNSYLVANIA AND MARKET STREETS
El
“YOU DON'T have to kill your-
honeymoon. But a shock awaits their return to New York. No sooner are they |hotel suite to find her prone on
or gr Ring a By je ea, har Jeet aching: har Back — [the use? Take the best and be CHAPTER 20 |done with it.” . MR. BARTLETT'S death threw | “But there isn't just a best!” everyone's plans awry. Instead of [she wailed, “There's just a most beginning at once, as they had expensive.” planned, to furni$h their now com-| “Well, the most expensive is pleted house, Bart and Gayle left |usually the best.” immediately for Sycamore, “| “It is not! Don't you believe it. The huge reception Mrs. Bartlett |I ‘know better than that. You had expected to give for them was, might just as well say the best of course, forgotten. Life was en- (pictures cost the most, and that's tirely suspended, it seemed, until |utter nonsense, after the funeral. " = = Gayle's grief was deep; In her | “SOMETIMES they do, of course, few meetings with Van Dyke but lots of times they don't. And Bartlett, she had come to love him, [it's the same with iceboxes and and all through her honeymoon [ranges and linoleum, I won't go she had looked forward to telling out and throw your money around. him how happy she was, Have you bought the bar yet?”
~ ” » SHE HAD little time for tears, I want.” | however, Bart needed her con-| She laughed in glee. “All right,
: | ty. You multiply that old bar stantly, He clung to her like a !SMAar 3 bout two hundred times and you'll frightened child. _ “I wish 1 had|®Pout WW a ¥
ave an idea what I'm u ainst.” known him better,” he whispered re- | have ar pag
~ ~ » . «“Oh, Gayle, I] . pealely ii Oh ay . SHE WAS up against more than
And then, his black eyes dull and | ere shopping; she was up Buinst confused, he would ask, “I don't|®: shockingly expensive interior know what to say to Mother, She | decorator who was determined to looks awful. Gayle.” (have his own way. He had offended “YF %oow. dear. Dont say any- Der on their first visit together to ’ : the house.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _
done was done, Once the pantry was stocked and the servants engaged, she and Bart could at last move into their home.
“No, I haven't seen just what ||
=
3
By Percy Marks
AND ONCE he was out of the way, Gayle found a middle-aged .decorator,. a woman who seemed to understand what was wanted after five minutes talk. “Nice,” she said, “but not too nifty. You want a sofa with style, but you don't want one that'll give you heart failure if your husband takes a notion to sprawl all over i." Gayle's sigh of thanksgiving was 80 deep that it seemed to have originated in her toes. .“That’s it! That's exactly it.” Eventually, the house was furnished. Everything that Gayle could think of that needed to be
b
FROM TEEN-AGERS
A total of 186 prizes will be awarded for ‘the best 100-word letters on the subject: “The Most Interesting . Activity of Our Teen Age Club or Youth Center,” according to an announcement made by Harry Farber of the Nehi Beverage Co, i The first prize winner will receive $200 in U, 8. savings bonds and in addition a Wurlitzer phonograph or juke box will be given to the club,
The contest. continues the threeyear program of the company in helping teen-age clubs provide wholesome entertainment.
WARSHIPS ON GREAT LAKES.
' GREAT LAKES, Il. (U. P), — Twelve decommissioned ships—mine
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i I dyes “AWRIC ¢'mon,” Tr: Indianapoli his hands hit the “ice and" with nq shoe laces, sore tape,” one, dugssed struggle wi The dressin Each man these strin with ‘a pai shoe laces. " stick,’ A sn took over.
sweepers, patrol craft, submarine chasers and landing craft—are being used along the Great Lakes in the Ninth Naval District to train
(To Be Continued) '
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thing. Just love her. Thats the In her innocence, she thought she!
most you can do.” : g . {ought to tell him in general what | Mrs. Bartlet did look awful. She {she wanted for each room, but she |
did not weep, but her control was {had hardly begun, when he lifted ! far -more frightening than tears. |, ic hand
There was something almost in-| “Please, please, Mrs. Bartlett,” he
human in her ley eal, | pleaded; “I beg you. I. must get
y ! icture; I must visualize—and | SHE NEVER broke, not at the * PI° : : | funeral and not later at the read- | NOW can I when you intrude on my
ing of the will. If she wept when | imagination with suggestions of alone, no one knew, and Gayle | this and Wate Ded looked him} could not believe she ever wept. | TYinally Gayle had looked him The will held surprises for no Square in fhe aye and sald: an one but Gayle and Miss Wallace. | 5°" Mr. aylon, ut we dom's want. a work of art. We want a
/ Wer ntioned in rat : A They Were mentior separate home. You are an artist. I'm
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THE FIF same spot dressed for t Faces were | heaving. Tt peel or a s broke the pr pointed out | was so quiet are for rest doorman cal the players ¥ blotches of | Second perio better. But everybody ke ~~ off,” T omething to the orange p the last peri game was o Cap dressing members wer
Wallace, “incomparable nurse and devoted friend.” The second, executed the day Bart and Gayle were married, stated, “To my daughter-in-law, Gayle Kent Bartlett, I hereby bequeath my most precious personal possession, the pearl pendant, pearl earrings, and pearl brooch which once belonged to my beloved mother.” Outside of large bequests to various charities, the remainder of the estate was left to his wife, Ellen Octavia Bruce Bartlett, all of it to be held in trust for his son, Bruce Van Dyke Bartlett, There was no legal provision made for the allowance Bart received, since Mr. Bartlett had had no fear that his wife would ever lessen the allowance. = n . WHEN ONCE they were back in the hotel in New York, Bart soon became himself again, Perhaps he grieved, Gayle did not know, but she was careful not to mention his father any more than circumstances forced her to. She acted, as best she could, as if there were no sorrow clouding their happiness and their plans. The furnishing of the house was | a task so monumental that at times | Gayle wondered if it would ever, | {if it could ever, be done. Bart was partly disturbed by her industry and partly amused by it.
MANUAL HIGH PLANS | TEA FOR NEW GIRLS
Manual Training high school announces the names of newly-elected officers in various classes and a tea for freshman girls and girls new to! the school. ‘ Approximately 200 freshman girls and girls new to the school, iniiiates of the Girls’ league of the school,! and their mothers will be entertained at a tea after school to-! morrow. The tea is sponsored by Masoma, girls’ honorary society and the GLM council led by Miss Helen
Newly elected officers of the GLM
[initiated in a roll call ceremony, |
officers are Marilyn Morical, president; | | Jean Roempke, vice president, and Bar-/| | bara Jacobs, secretary, Freshman lead- |
| officers English IIT officers are Betty Corder, ary Lou Petersen and therine Organ, lish IV. Faith Munr, Viola Reifeis Dorothy Schienbein; English V, Marilyn Hafer, Alice Hagan and Helen
Crary, Patricia Donahue and Rosemary Adams, | Miss Theo B. Parr, Miss Dorothy Ellis, Miss Freda Hart, Miss Caryl Gaines, Mrs, Verna Magee, Mrs, Rovene Yeager
| Ine Mertz, Miss Menka Guleff, Miss Eva | Gladys Denney, Mrs. Margaret Kniptash
{and Mrs, Dorothy Kenoyer are faculty sponsors who will assist with the tea
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