The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 6 June 1932 — Page 3
CLASSIFIED ADS Anchors Avveigh!
THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, MONDAY, JUNE 6,1932
Baseball siATistrcs
fOR 166 Acre farm, 70 re s in bottom, good buildinRs. Five ffl j| es southwest of Greeneastle. Ross | Tort, Route 5. 3-6p | ^jqr SALE—Good roll top desk, W( )0 Cook’s South End Store. Phone 13A Jxir' SALE — Strawberries. C. W. folt- Rbcne R-1611. 6-lt jrQR SALB -R'diy chkk«iu m r r,ultiy -uppHes, Tuesdayjs and Fri(jgyi of each week for the summei months at reduced prices. Record’s Hsuhery. 1H East Franklin Street. f T ieem'astle. Ind. 6-tf
FOR SALE—Plants: t matoes. 1U:-; »»ngoes 10c; cabbage 5c, per dozen. T'nonU'Son. Commercial Place, Phone tdiL 6-n FOR SALE—Second hand Mas e R a ,ii 5 binder. T. H. Morris, Green caf ,le. Ind., Rural Route 3. 6-7-8-13-14 15 6p for SALE—Goosebeiries, 35 cents per gallon. 212 Higert St. Mrs Milton Klebush. 4-lt —For Rent— FOR RENT — Modern fuinishei i ,ms fi 'gle or light housekeeping 606 ea*t Washington street. Phone *08 K. 6-3t FOR RENlT — Modern furnished two or three room apartment, 410 E. Washi gton St. 4-2p
FOR RENT: Modem Brick Veneer house in Hanna Court. Phone 142-L. 2-tf. - Wanted—
Silver Medals For
Standing Of Teams American Association
Pet -633
28 DePauw Minimi
| Minneapolis
...31
18
,. t1 —
Indianapolis
...27
20
•574
HONOR STUDEM- WHO GRAD-
Milwaukee
.... 25
20
.556
UA fEI) HA LI 1 EMERY OK
Columbus .
24
.529
MOKt AGO
Kansas City ...
...23
24
.489
Louisville
... 19
25
.432
■
Toledo . . .
... 20
27
.426
DePauw univei tv Saturday con*
St- P.iul
16
30
.348
ferrej silver me M upon twenty-
— Ante', lean I Clubs
League W.
1
Pro.
■ 1 .!, 1: 1.1 fifty jears or more ago. This was a fiat’a:. nf the 1 l.upel t-rvice on the
New York . . . .
... 32
14
.696
alumr.i day program Thi innovation
Washington
... 28
20
583
of presenting me 1,1s ti all who te-
Detroit
26
19
.587
turn after fifty ".us will he con-
Philadelphia . .
... 27
21
.663
tinue i yeai aftrt yeai. The pro en-
Cleveland
... 27
22
551
tation v, 3 made by Dr He ry B
St. Louis
... 21
25
Longden, vice pn .iLnt ot D T’auw
! Chicago
... 16
29
.366
and hitnfi If an ai mnu of the cla
, Boston
36
200
of 1881.
Clubs
Chicago Poston' ... Pittsburgh St. Louis
National League W. 28 29
22
23
There must be something in the popular belief that sailors have a way with them. No suonei had Midshipman William H. Holmes received the sheepskin at Annapolis graduation ceremonies that automatically made him an Ensign in the U. S. Navy that be was the recipient of this swell congratulation from Miss Frances Stone. Both are of Oklahoma City.
Cincinnati 24 Brooklyn 23 Philadelphia 21 New York 19
L. 19 20 21 24 27 20 27 25
Pet. ■596 .592 .512 .489
Thirteen of the fifteen living graduates from the da- of 1S92, the gollen ::nni\ isary cla H turr.el to receiv? th*i) award. They wete Mr-. Nellie Tmett l ockiilge, Lilian.ip 1 i.- : Misj Kate S. llaninu. d. Given, a-tie: Samuel H. Elrod, Cl irk. S. I).; the .4711 Rev. Henry C. < lippin ei Gr en \ cl: .4691 Andrew J. Piuit'. Lakeland. Fla.; .4381 Frank T. Rumbargei. Philadelphia,
.132
WANTED: Schcol children to niter durinte summer. Phone 75-K. 3 !p WANTED:—Furniture to repair or rebuild, also refinishing, reasonable price.- Ross Wiley, 36 Beveridge St. 2-3p. —Lost—
LOST — Ladies purse containing 620. - me papers, engraved car Is, etc. Finder may keep ?10. Return to The Barnei office. 4-2p
Miscellaneous
WASHINGTON, I). C., and vicinity.
Only 138 50 from Greeneastle for ALL EXPENSES including round trip rail faie, best hotel accomodatuns, all metl- and complet? sight-seeing, per•orilly escorted LEO E. MENDEL Tuvel Service. Five day tour, June 21 to 25. For further information
and reservations apply BIG
PROHIBITION PLANK \SS1 RED | IN RRI'l HI.|< \\ i>| \ i FORM WASHINGTON, June 6. (UP)— 1 Adoption of a prohibitio, tesubmis--ion plank by the Republican national committee is definitely predicted by i some of the party leaders now busily 1 engaged in a seatvh for the best f ,rmula in which to embody su h a de claration. “I am confident now that a le-sub-missio-, plank will be adopted.” -aid Senator Moses, X. H after a conference of party chieftains Sun lay afternoon. Republican leader Watson of the
YESTERDAY’S RESULTS American Association Columbus, 3-8; Indianapolis, 2-5. Toledo, 9-7; Louisville, 4-2. Milwaukee, 6-5: St. Paul 3-7. Minneapolis, 12-7; Kansas Cit , 7-5 (stiend game ten innings.) American League New York, 12; Boston 1 Detroit. 10; Ch veland, 9 Philadelphia 11; Washington, 7. St. I oui.- at Chicago (tain). National l.ragne Philadelphia, 7; Brooklyn, 6. Boston, 6-7; New York 5-6 (first game ten innings.) St. Louis 3-3, Cincinnati, 2-2. Pittsburgh at Chicago (rain).
LOCAL TEAM WINS The Greenca«tle-Brazil Cnl ted Allstar •= defeated the Eminence baseball
senate said virtually the entire dis- team. 10 to 5, on Sunday afternoon at cu sion was devoted to the prohibition Eminence. Saunters and Cochrane plank, an I he confirmed Moses’ view f r , n e | the battery for the wii eis. that the tendency of the conferees This Sunday the All stars will cro s wa* toward resubmission. Both drys bats with the -tiong Terre Haute as well as wets were represented. I Colore.l Athletics in this city.
NOTH'I'. TO VOA-RKMIH N'T State of Indiana, County of Putnam, hs In the Putnam Circuit Court.
No. 13971
Louisville Joint Stock Land Bank
Plaintiff.
FOUR M;h \ B Cr*' nian. et nl . Defrmiants
Ticket Office. Phone 10i>.
3 et
CID \si BRITISH SUBMARINE TO RE SOLD AND SCRAPPED LONDON, (UP)—An outcast, the M3 Is-: of the ill fated type of sub•rsiines, is tied up In disgrace at Portsmouth, waiting to be sold to the •rai'iets. Her two sisters, Ml and M2 Went down with all on board. M4 nevei nas completed. Such is the end of the tragic submsrine- designed by the late Lord Pisher for operations in the Baltic »ith the Rus.-inn fleet against the Otimsn vessels. They were mounted *ith m old style 12 inch gun and their draught was made shallow for the Baltic. On.i,ally the four submariner weic "signer) with a high spec I to '’IK'iate with the British Grand Fleet, but Fisher revised them before the> »eti completed, cut down their sur fare speed from 24 to 15 l 4 knots and decreased their torpedo armament. None of the submarine, war comFlttcil before the Armistice hut Ml •ent *o Turkey during the p st-war troubles there. She looked very im pressive hut had frequent motor P uMe anil blew the muzzle of her 12-1' h gttr three times during prac-
tice.
Her tragic end came in November. 1925, while exercising with the Ports m *>uth flotilla off Start Point. She dived and did not reappear. She had * crew of 68. It was believed that a fhvedish vessel rammed her while
tartly submerged.
The fate of the M2 in January, 1932 *•* similar. She dived in exercises off Portland Rill and carried all the
to their graves.
ary B rtion
age.
MM IT
lay,
by
foreclose real estate mort KNOWN that tin the 2*t!i <lav
( [.OVERD U E W INS Th- Cl verdale Grays, strengthened by the addition of Reb Russell and "i,i formei Dad) baactx| walhped the strong Crawfordsville j in e, 10 to 2. in a tilt at Crawfordsville Sunday.
Pa.; Albeit A. Small. Indianapolis; Edwin C. s'mit i, S nf rd, Fla.; Anne E. W’alktr, Willoughby, ().; Albeit 1“. liu nrdil', W ab ish- hid.; Thonia- O. Cunningham, Lan.- n City, Kans. Rosa R. Mikel . In ,ian..| (dis; and Charles
N. Tlicn:; on, Indianapolis.
Others who were graduated prior to 18S2. w ;o receivi I medals, were: l:.s ! ic'ni, Charles F. Coffin, IndianaI lis; Di. He,ary 1) Longden. Gre n' ra-tle; Geoige Swi.z r St. J,,< , Mich,; Samuel B. Grimes Danville; a d S. D M, ue, St Pet r burg. ITu , ( la--1‘ 79, Delilah li. Miller, Greeneastle. ( !.i s Ihi.s. Dr. J. S Schultz. Delphi. 1 1 la: 1S77, i h ml Haynes College Station. Texas, and Anna L. Moirison, Willoughb . Ohio. ( la 1872, S. A. Hays, Gaenca tie. and Mis. Ella Browder, Chicago- < la- 1868 John 1 W. Rob* and John R. Miller, Green-1 castle. Class 1866. Dr. Salem B.
Town.
The Alum i Council also met during the morning with I. uis S. Binkley ,,f Chicago presi liii" a chairman. ! Officer:' wer.- te-electe 1 for the coming vtai w ich included Mr. Binkley, chairman; Mis Natalie Coffin, Indin ipolis, vi e-ehairman; H. E. Sutheilin. I dinnapoli tieiisurer, and' Russell Alexander Green istle. sec-1 retary. At n on mote than 400 alum* ni attended the alumni luncheon | which wa- -erved in Bowman gym-j nasiu.ii. I iie an uni meeting of the
TO FORCE HOUSE ACTION ON GARNER RELIEF BILL WASHINGTON, June 6 (UP)_ Huuse rules committe deci oh today to force house action ton onnw on th. Garner unemployed re! i ill under the most stringent rules ru-i adopted
■ by the committee.
The spe tkei’s $2.300 000,000 un-1 i mploymer.t relief program \\a marching swiftly toward probable house passage de.-pite a renewed president assault on its proposed bil-lion-dollar bond issue for non produc-
tive .public works.
The White house anr.ouncment! said Mr. Hover and reconstruction efficial- had agieed on four points “necessary to speedy economic recovery.” The unemployment and business relief program lias been previously .advocated by the president. It is: 1. Double the borrowing power of the reconstruction corporation to $3 IKIO.OOO.OOO to enable it to loan funds to public bodies and corpora tions for “.-elf-liquidating” constructing profits. To provide $300,000 000 for loans to states for direct relief and to provide additional funds lot the federal farm board. 2. Creation of a system of home loan discount hank- to pi >tect homeowners from foreclosure and to stim-
ulate building-
3. Coordinate with the reconstruction corporation the credit expansive work of industrial and financial committees now being organized in the federal reserve districts. I Rigid economy, with ab-. lutTL no rvpenditures being undertaken which cannot be paid for from current tax income without borrowing by the treasury. This excludes the
billion-doliar bord issue proposal in the Garner bill. L \\ DIVORt E LAM S i’KOl ESSOR’S I A KG E l CHICAGO, (UP)— Lax divorce laws will put divorce on a p.n with marriage before the end of the century, believe Prof- James J. ( herry of the law college of D Paul Univ«rsity, who , xoabated Reno as the symbol of “ea y, uick and painless divorce.” A legal maze more intricate than jig-saw puzzle has re-ulted from conflicting state law -aid Cherry. It point-(1 cut that presi nt laws would call a man legally married in >n< state, while in other- he would, t the .-ante time be variously s upland a bigamist. “The tangle in recent year, has grown greatly and there i.- today no positivi and certain method of figui ing the legal, petal, finamial, religion and other combination of woes that can ari.-e to he devil a man or woman, who, having entered upon a marriage, -e k to be free ag in,” he
- said.
of cabbage, add
PREVENTING INSECT I) \M AGE IN GARDEN
C tiipill.u.- and other leaf-eating in. e t . Cate) pillar-. slugs, beetles and otli r in-< t. which skeletonize, i it hole- i t nth, nvi.- e devour the folk e > f garden plants are usually Hit lily < nt,oiled by the use of a stomach poi-on such as arsenate of li!. A a liquid spray, nine level tea , n: ful of ars, ate i f lead with a galli-i of water mixid together, and ipply with a fine, misty spiuy, so as to r a h bet upper and under sura e ,,f the foliugIt the foliage is
waxy as in the cave
a cubic inch of :o;i t each gallon of i, piay to in rease a.lh iveness. If one prefers t use a lust, mix one part f arsenate of lead <>r calcium ar ena e with five ut of hydrated lime , i flour a I dust on the plants. Melon or ( ucumho Bgc.le-. Certain active in- t which cat the foliage, such a.- -triped cucumh i hretle, are best ccnti lied with pecial dust mixtui.s A mixtuie ,t one part of calI ciuni : :s,mute ac.l 2 ) pait - of gyp- | sum or land pl .stet hr. given excellent co trol if applied regularly at weekly intervals. A n v material, | which gave unusually it te ult- in first te t- in 1931 i hariam flousilicate. In many ca two. plications, ! ten days apart gave cci y lete con-
I trol.
Ap ids or pl.i t Lee and other -oftbodied -u'king in ' ds. Aphids are amo - g the commonest | , ; in the garden. They atlu k alnu st every kind of plant. 11- ai: e t c reproduce and increase so tapidly and beau < they sometime - curl th, foliage f plants . tta kel. it 1 , : rn ite-t importan.e th t contr I men ures be appliel before they become enormously abun ant and before the; have def. rmed the plant and se ined protection in the curled I aver The spray to be use I i- a nnot a o pyrethrum extract, diluted uc tding to directions on the contain i. I a 40 |ier cent nicct ne ul|. ate i u-cl, dilute at the rate f 1’. t, e aeonful to a gallon of water in which a cubic inch of soap has been assolvod. Sir.ce there umtaet pr:i' kill by contact with the insect, th noughm , a- well as timeliness in appli ation in essential for satisfai t, i i-ntrol.
tiff, by its attornoya, filed in the office of the Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court in the State of Indiana its com-
plaint ■K.iinst the .•il.ov-ii:un.,,l ‘b .Sunday the Fillmore nine will tackle
fendants. Mary H ' n-.-eis
El ELMORE WINS
The Fillmore Men Hants defeated Cuba, 8 to 4. Sunday at Cuba. Next
Ft ocman,
ry I
hei
Freeman ami Dennis husband, llarvuy M.
Ciiiili"r. Nevadn K. Murray, unmarried, Crawforduville n.illv Company. FuK'‘iie At. Ooodbar and ——■—■" Ooodliar, tils wife. .1 W Kltzsbnmons and Algan At. names, and Hie sale! plainiifl having also filed li, -aid Clerk's offi, ,- Hie uffldnvl* nf a .'onipetent person slmwIng that the defendant, Nevada R. At',IT;i. Is a non "Sident of the Slate ■ It Indiana, and that the saol del. nii.int Nevada K Allirr.,' resides In Hie city of Chnmpalgn Illinois; that this a, Hon is 1.1,oight to f..,— lose a real , -t ,te mort a a a e, nnd Hilt the sal,I Nevada J-; Murray Is !i ne. essary part' thin netion and the -.ild ptalntifl li.ulnx,
i,i , -■aid eompia »t r. -, |, prs j n that town and meet there oc'ii ..:'! v "t’o ail , in n, sa"hl e.'.u,‘''''and .oaMonally for that reason, ansiy.-r nr d, ihereto on th« ."Hij while in si ssion the vetqratis dL'''v3v TiV!:i: | :i'' | b l |': V,y order of M ,u -ed their annual picnic with the Yfumi v is hereby notified of tlie tiling i . o . uni |u*iid«n' \ -if the romp hi iut u m i prohaVily will be held the l«'ist . und i\ h. i. mil that ,, she apio ,i a, ,i | | t (h fairgrounds In Urnvv-
answer or demar thereto at th, , allltin 1,1 s ipi eaiis. ■■ Ho' 24 day of Septem-1 fordsville. her l!irtj. Hi, ae helng Hie Isl judl- |
* said court to be.
In ed initiation services for Mrs- Burk
Stilesvllle at Stilt sville.
SI’AN ISH W -AR \ El EK \NS
MET AT BRAZIL si NDAY
Members of the local post of Spnni h-American War Veterars and members of the post auxiliary, attended the June -meeting of the or ganizations in Brazil Sunday The meeting wa< held in Brazil because the organizations have several mem-
eluI day of
hegun and loM al Ihe courthouse tl. (Mtv of ' rnCHHtle on the -Mil 'lav of ft. Dt, I li- ! In the year !»M. said
Members of the auxiliary conduct
Clf*rk P itunni Cir«’i»it Court. wn -yj 1 \tlollM'.
Bilker &
. In, Attorneys
Booker of Patrick: burg,
Those who attended the meeting j were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ashworth. Mi. ard Mrs. A. J. Duff. Mr. and Mrs. Alva Brothers, Mr. and Mrs I T >m Tuttle, Mr. and Mrs Jess Beemler. Mr. and Mrs. Fay Davidson, Mr.
'and Mrs. John Rhoades, Mr. and Mr
SHERI EE’S SALE
Bv vinue of a certified copy of a'Oscar Irwin, Mi. and Mrs. Burk p,to me directed from the Glerk p.^ker, Mr. and Mrs. George Harris, of the Putnam Circuit Court in 11 , \p. s (’harles Donnohue. Mrs. Paul cau , wheiein the State of n-h-n-b p an , Donnohue, l ea Paxtor
T.,„ M ■ «»
nrl e! al. ,t" Defendants, requiring Steele, Otho Vermillion, (Jeoige Slav-
nu t make ti c nf One thi<u»ann f>ns> |,; 4 j w i n Black,
five hundred and forty-fiv.
dollars
and sixty-fiv with in . t .*’ rPSt on l
NOTli E OF QUALIFICATION OE
EXECUTOR
Noti 'e is hereby given, that the "htn • igned has duly qualified as E*f:utor of the La»t will and testa-
aient ■
said dei ree
Ht Public Sale
D. 19-32. o’clock A.
avfeirkety INDIAN A POI.IS LIVESTOCK
83; market 160 to 225 to 250 lb:.,
,nd costs, I will expose
I" to the highest bidder. on Saturday, the 25th day of June A.
between the hours of 10 M. and 4 o’clock P. M. ofj
._ij a. iV at the door of the Court _ limise in Pntnam d unty, Indiana. the|
rents ind profit* for a» term not ex- p,,,,, 5,000, holdovers feeding seven years, the following r gt , y , fi rpn(s bijfhei; Real Estate to. wit: nortl , P . it ' lb* . 12.50 to $2.55; 225^ Uf t hi’ a '<'Uth f east quarter of *3.40 to *3 46; 250 to 300 lbs, 13.30 qUH *imi twenty-six (26), in township to $3.35; 3C0 to 350 lbs.. $3.20 tfifteen (15) north of range three CD no to 160 llis.. $3 40 to f3.50 west, containing twenty (20) acres, ^ ^ 180 ib s ., $3.30; packing sows Confer, deceased, Imo^ or le^^ profjt ^ will nnt $2.2 II f.'i a -uffi-'ient sum to satisfy c .ttle 400; calves 360; improved ac-
n » l » County, Indiana, and has been; ^ ^,,-,.,,,/jnterevis and cost-, I will, fjH|| 0 m0Ht r | aF cs; few -tiers and du 'y Authorized by aaid Court »o ad at t |, p M me time atri idwe^exim e^a^ ^ 2B ( . entg u;) . , , p stock -low; t,muter said estate. ’ public mile 'J”'^‘.i,' t h ( . r ,, ( ,f «: may steeis #6.00; good heifers $5 50; ccws S«id estate is auppoaed to lie aol f i>t "* , ‘ ( .V i "j pn t to diacharge aaid decree, 7 r ( to $3.56, some $1.00 and above;
and coSts Ha id sale will I" hu ,. u f ten and cutter* $1*50 to
June «. 1932. Cauae No. 7463.
ETHEL DEAN CONFER, Executor
" M. Sutherlih, attornay.
J »hn W. Herod, Clerk ef th* Futn »m Cirsutt Court. 6-8t tiff.
1#m * R»lph A. Confer, deceased, more <> r nn(| profits w i|i n „t $2.25 t,. $2 90. 111 the Putnam Circuit Court, cf Put-' ,f . lt fficient um to satisfy, r : ,ttle 400; calvoa 300; improved a . . » l yPll TU* •' ..4 I xi/ill "
inti rest and co?ts. Said side wi 1 | ow , U (teis and cutters ^1-50
^%^ , X U noripSm^
Sheriff Putnam County. Ihigheri ewes and wethers $7 50 to Mav 28 A. D- 1932. . ! $8.00; most bucks out at $1.00 diajohn H. Jame», Attorney for Plain- c(mnt Throwouta down to $4.00.
held in the af-
board of tiustee vv.i
ternoon thla y >■. 1.
Thi nfterno n vves devoted t" da-s uni, n the cl 1 "s ot 1907 an,I 1922 having Lilts. The t "is met b"ncath the gn nt Lee:- 0.1 the campu -. R gist rati on vv;t the large: t in recent yeai.-. For the first time alumni vi itoi vveie pci\ lege I t 1 see :i mdi:uy I rmation us a pait of tii" day* exerci-e Ihe : 1 nlois in the R. O. T. vveie commis. i,,,!e:i at the flag pole the campus Saturday aft. rnoon at 1:30. It is Capt i n It. It. McMahon’* last ye;, i as hea i f the DePaUW unit. The annual r, 1 ption give a to alum ni amt friends "t the univei-ity by President and Mr . G. B. Oxnam. was held in Reel r hall thi year. The second performance of the senior Pi«s play. "The New Poor," completd the pi gram of the day hut many ilum i continued to ban,I together into g.oups about the campu - and in the fraternity h uses reminisi ing of foimet day A ban 1 concert by the DePauw univ isity hand followed the (inner i, ur on the campus. MRS. KNl I E RGCKNE VISIT S St ENF. WHERE HI SBAND DIED B AZA AR Kan., June 6, i UP)— Mi . Knut. Rockne, widow of the late Xotre D ime football coach, yesterday .i ite| the scene of the nir|)lane crash in whi h her husband ai d seven other men wen killed in March, 1931 1 his .vas he fii t visi; 11 the scene. Mrs Rockne and her four children, accompanied hv Dr. I). N. Nigio of Kan as City and seceral other per mis. knelt hesid* the stone which marks the a| t of the tragedy on the S. H. Baker raecii near h- re, an! offered a brief prayer. The Kansa Rockne Memorial Association plan-' to eieit a monument at the «"ene a 1 to establish a memorial park 1 f some 40 acie- around it. WEI CANDIDA! E LEADING RALEIGH. N. June 6, (UP)— \ wet. Robert D. Reynold*, Aahvillf*, today maintained p lecd over a dry,' U. S. Sen itoi Cameron Morrison,! Chat! tte. for the Demociatic nomina-' tion for United States :enator from North Catolina. i tate that has been
dry sin e 19,,8.
But Revm hi" had nt t won a majority of the votes l ist in Satur lay’s state primary, and th wet-dry battle of the primary (ampaigi will be waged again in a run-off vote July 2 unles* he can gain 45,000 votes in the 360 precincts outstanding.
By HAZEL LIVINGSTON , COPYRIGHT 1951 BY KISO FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC. ,
SYNOPSIS Young and beautiful Lily Eou -ansing aspires to an operatic ca-e-er, but her moderate circumitances necessitate that she go to lusinesa and study music evenings. Vealthy Ken Sargent, whom Lily _*>u loves, hecomes angry when she nsistr, upon practicing instead -d eeing him and discontinues calling, -ily Lou grows listless and overvorku trying to forget him. She (oes to her parents' home in Woodake for a rest. Ken arrives and nice again she is happy, but she issumes an air of indifference .oward him. * * CHAPTER EIGHT Her father would reach down and put his slow, tough old hand over here. She knew what he was thinking . . . hoping she wouldn’t be going out. From the roeker her mother would say, “Dear, dear, the time joes so fast . , That meant that soon Lily Lou would be leaving them again, and in the few nights that were left she oughtn’t to slip away with Ken. Lily Lou’s soft heart ached for them. She wanted to shower them with love, to make up lo them . . . they’d done so much for her . . . But in the midst of her tender thoughts of them, the thought of Ken would come stealing . . . under her father’s warm palm her hand would tremble, her whole body would begin to shake with silly, cold excitement . . . suppose he didn’t come . . . well, what of it? Suppose he didn’t? What was it to her? And the cold perapirution would break out on her forehead, on the palms of her hands. She’d be almost sick with the intensity of waiting . , . her ears straining to hear every sound . . . was that a motor? Was it turning down the lane . . . what if he didn’t Come? And then he'd drive up to the gate. There'd be the sound of the motor being shut off. His step on the hard dirt path, his voice “Lily Lou?” questioning, in the dimness, and the glad warmth in it when he saw it was really she . . . “Take your coat, Lily Lou,” her mother would coax. Coat? Lily Lou, all warm and glowing . • . a coat? It would smother her. "No, I don’t want a coat, mother!” “You'd better. It gets cool later,” her father would urge. “But we won’t be long!” Lily Lou would never admit that they were going to be long. They always started out the same way, he a little silent and disappointed because she had promised to be right back ... she cool and self-possessed, all slim and pale in her summer clothes, her dark hair, sleek, pressed close to her head , , and inside! Oh, inside, all breathless with excitement, all flattery with what had happened to her . , . Lily Lou Lansing. , , . Someone in love with her! Ken Sargent was in love with her. Lily Lou knew it. Knew it with the unfailing intuition that tells the secret to every girl. She used to study herself in the big mirror in her room, the room with the big feather bed and the marble-topped dresser and the two straight backed chairs. The setting was all wrong ... the cheap Uce spread that someone had given to mother, the pink and blue silk cushions with the gold lace edging ,., but she was all right.,. pretty ’ ’ she knew it . , »
"Darling, y,
1 ip »ee l.ou? ”
Oh, what e.iait 1 do
L
.. I. J
She’d take the ! hand mirror slu ' her, stand in u I study her while, ti
finely-arched eyeli;
dark eyes, vclve;> It wasn’t va:i(tv
of self-defense. .' he of it as part of )-i
her stage appear:.!. 1 -c was trying, oh, so 1,: .,1 to 1- 1 that she wasn’t just :!.e v o r -<t Lansing, livin? m a ti •> li.ll shed-like house, being squired around by the rich Nari'i-nt !>-<> - ■ . She was the girl who w: g >('•«' to he a star ... a star wli-> had a natural voici und a dynamo ot
I i!y Lou stood on the porch. She watched him go. Watched him 1 ir.'di into the ear, start the engine. He never even looked hack. He •ouldn’t be going, like that. Without a word, after all he’d told her about loving her . . . But he wasl The ear was moving . . . Lily Lou opened her mouth to call him—he shouldn’t go like that! No sound eeme. Just a husky gurgle in her throat. Couldn't let him go . , . not like that. . . . She ran down the path, tripped over the garden hose. A terrible cracking pain in her ankle. She
screamed.
The green roadster stopped.
energy, and an iron will, and yes’ Her ankle hurt so that - lie couldn’t a lovely face and figure . . - the j get up. She sat there on the walk, girl who was going to see her name -- : * u “ -r-'-i m,'
LILY LOU LANSING in electric lights, whose face would look hack at her from magazines, from newspapers, from billboards , . . When the soft, secret excitement, the thrill of Ken would sweep over her too strongly, she'd rush wildly to the piano . . . lift up her voice
and sing.
Her mother, In the kitchen, or rocking on the porch, would listen, half afraid. She sensed, without realizing just what it was, that something was wrong. She thought that Lily Lou was working too hard. She wasn’t quite herself. “I love you, Lily Lou.” It earne to her often now. Ken's half-hesi-tating, half-coaxing whisper. Though her whole being thrilled to it, she kept her voice steady. “Don’t be silly, Ken,” she always
said.
And one night he surprised her. “Kiss me goodbye, Lily Lou. 1 m going back to town in the morning. 1 won’t be seeing you again, for a while.” She lifted her face, and he kissed her, gently. Then he got out and opened the door of the car, and walked with her up the dirt path to the door. “Goodnight, Lily Lou.” He didn’t evsn try to kiss her again.
with it doubled under her, and bit her lip to keep from crying. It hurt *0 ... it hurt so . . . and Ken was
going away.
He had stopped the car, nnd was running back to her. "Darling, you've hurt yourself ... let me see. . . . Oh, what shall I do for you,
Lily Lou ?”
She saw his face, strained and white and terrified in the starlight. , . . His face, all tortured, because
she was hurt.
Warm tears overflowed her eyes. She reached up her arms, and buried her face on his shoulder. “I was running , , . to vail you back,
and I fell—”
Now that she was started, she couldn’t atop. . . . Lily Lou, who never cried. . . . “I didn’t want you to go,” she sobbed, “bo I ran—” He had her in his arms, and she saw his face, triumphant, exalted— It frightened her a little. She wiped her eyes, managed to say “I’m sorry for making a fuss. 1
must go in.”
She got to her feet. The ankle didn't hurt so much now. She must have imagined it it was just s wrench. “It’s nothing,” 8b» iP u him—“moatly fright.” # (To Be Continued) f'oojfrifht by King Feature* Syndkare,
