Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 February 1947 — Page 15
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lial of atomic war a delivering agent he futile stupidity
l¢ spades. All big 1g sight, especially
sky full of these ir fmitless range for destruction, is
ne Hip tor Knowland re~ “Wag only staging
mimittee’s official ver for Moscow's ~~ Soviet-American at he thought it pome involved on when pressed, he licy is an aggresespecially when understatement.
rded as all the Ung. my at , sensational ‘and
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was plainly shoot- «© |
launching a new into silerice while dsides. ’
Professor
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Herbs
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Language H. M. Gelston ate
Butler university department of ‘herbs in that vegetable or
- classical languages and archaeology | garden seed order.
. Mr. and Mrs, F. B, Mendenhall, sciences, was announced today bY|,.eq garrollton ave, raise a num-1 them
in the college of liberal arts and President M. O.
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Dr. Gelston
the graduate and chives
, some times summer savversity of Michi-|,; the table and as I fill a can of gan where he had | j,ice drop in a sprig of each. I been doing ad-|¢hink we get the most fun out of vance work and|pas) it has so many uses, I alWas an assistant | oo 0y use thyme with pork, put Dr. Gelston jeaches in ue some of it in French dressing, too. school. ~ Mr, Mendenhall enjoys them in in 1900 from Michigan. salad—they pep it up, Lemon balm The educator entered the Univer-|(is nice in iced tea, and borage is sity of Michigan graduate school in Worth growing just for its pretty 1906 and when he came to Butler [147Ender Blue fowera® = in 1910 he received the title of act- their herbs different types of
ing professor of classical languages. ground and He held this title until 1913 when he | reputation became professor of Latin language | soil.
years ago from). hunch of each—always some basil
v2" They Should Be Included in Basil, Chives Add |
- To Taste of Foods If you lke good food include some
flower
and get a fresh sprig when ‘ | want it, not planted as we have had them, in a vacant lot at some distance,” . (Many herbs lend themselves nicely to flower beds. Dwarf pure ple basil, growing omy five or six inches tall, makes a neat edging plant while the color of its leaves is as pretty as Joe Pye weed!) " .» ” w IT'S TIME to break scraggly tops off. houseplants—they’ll now
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of the department the same year.|the house where you can run out
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| ARTHUR MELLINGER, R. R. 17, well on poor doesn’t agree (with a'previous colMendenhall con-/umn) that this is the best time of and literature. He was made head |cludes, “They ought to be close to|year to prune fruit trees. Of his
Easy fo Raise in Poor Soil;
v
experience of 40 years, he says, “I do all pruning in June. A limb over one inch in diameter should be coated with pine tar. The tree is in full growing condition. Wham you cut off a branch or twig, nature immediately starts healing the wound. It will roll the cambium layer over the edge of the cut the first summer. Also you can tell what branches are dead and can remove them, This may not be the popular conception but it works and is sound in principle.” Lest beginners be confused by
house as they grow roots,
mer pruning. Expert advice says dormant pruning is best. But in
you'll get the most fun out of it if you first learn the rules, then do your own experimenting and break
what seems like conflicting advice,
a few.
Your Spring Seed Order
NEAT TRICK—Mrs. Thomas Earl, 29 S. Tremont st. off her houseplants, makes them into tiny bouquets to brighten
let me say you will not harm fruit| TEETH gnashing department for trees by either late winter or sum- those who nurse their African vio4 lets along in hope of a flower: Mrs. Ella Akers and her sister, Mrs. Ida | Lyden, 928 W. 32d st., have a violet this as in all forms of gardening| that has bloomed constantly since August, 1945. Mrs. Clifford Gertig, 7007 Rockville rd., tops this with one that has flowered continuously for over five years.
gd
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, takes tops
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Times Serial—
Love Has Two Faces By Irene Lonnen Ernhart
IR
THE STORY: The machine works are a fiasco, All that's left of Parker's for-
Har BB tes f ndent, way he has falled Cassie. Keyed w he tells Ber that Lon has sei Len up an apartment in New York,
CHAPTER 17
“OH no. Not Leni. ‘Leni wouldn't be like that!” The room swam. Hadnt’ she known what was happening when Leni wrote describing her apartment, and threw in casual mention of the mink coat, and the sports roadster? Leni wasn’t making that much money singing in a night club. “I'm sorry,” Parker said. “I didn’t mean to tell you. But you'd have found out sooner or later. It's common gossip even here in Mortonville.” Cassie began to cry, and he looked remorseful. “You're right about my attitude,
|
Cassie! I'll try to snap out of fit,
and I'll find a way to get us back where we belong again)” # » .
couldn’t thinking of Leni.»
fled,” Parker cried. He began to walk back and forth in the restless way she had come to know so well. Later, that night, lying awake on the cot in the nursery, she thought of Leni. She thought of Parker, too. Did he wish he hadn't married her, after all? Did he miss the something she could have given' Mike but could not give him? Mike! No yearning any more. Only heaviness. She wouldn't start picking over the past, The future was the thing! The immediate future! Ellen and Parker and her. Moonlight fell across the crib in the -corner by the swindow. The
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baby stirred and then was still again,
w » w WAS Parker too lying awake wallowing in a swirling ocean of vague regrets and recriminations? He was already eating breakfast when Cassie came downstairs the next morning, Papa was out pumping water to be heated on the range for the baby’s washing. Mama, still in her faded blue bathrobe, her hair in pigtails, stood warming herself by the range. She had fried eggs and made coffee. “You're up early,” Cassie said to her husband. She had a bundle of baby washing under cne arm and the empty bottle from the night feeding in her hand. “I'm going in to town.” “I'd have come down to eat with you, if I'd known you were up.”
FJ » » “WE'RE going to have to do something about this kitchen, Cassie,” he said brusquely. His glance took in the sinkf#ll of dirty dishes, the Washbasin half full of soapy water someone had neglected to empty, the water-stained shelf where mama kept a soap dish and comb and all papa’s shaving clutter, “We're going to have to do something about this whole blamed mess if we've got to live here for any length of time!” J “As soon as I get around to it—" Cassie began, He got up abruptly, came by and pecked her cheek and went down the hall for his things. In a moment they heard” the sound of the door closing, and then the car motor. :
o » o A COUPLE of plumbers trucks drove up that afternoon and almost before Cassie knew it there were plumbers all over the house, measuring, estimating. And after awhile there was an electrician and his helper asking her where she intended to put the new range Mr. Hamilton had bought. “Parker!” she met him at the front door. “Oh Parker—what in the world did you make all those arrangements to’ modernize the house for? We could have managed! You surely know the five hundredll be gone in no time if we start spending so much all at once!” He put down his hat, and for an instant his face was stiff with annoyance. Then he grinned. “I've got a job!” “A job! Oh-—darling—that's dif ferent!” she cried. . He put his arms about her waist and danced her around, and they laughed together.
» » ” ol “IT’S nothing much,” he said as they went toward the kitchen. “It’s in the office at Cavendish Chemical. Routine office job, doesn't pay much, but if I work hard—who knows?” “Everything's going to work out!” Cassie cried. “You'll see. I'm going to make new slip covers for the
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living room furniture with those chintz drapes from the other house.
CASSIE tried to smile, but she DOWIE. | forever. “If only we had a plano in this feet again we'll move,” he threw consarned house, I could be satis- over his shoulder.
pes This is really a nice house, and if we Just get with paint and
“Let's have a cocktail!” He went : to the cupboard and got down a
“We won't be living here As soon as I get on my
(To Be Continued)
.
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