The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 August 1933 — Page 3
NOWI-
‘r* Mti -'■ej M v ■ ’!> f:rs Mn 4 tt ad rtten •Mn k. Ei. m k and niaiu. bled GritQ iar;|d f Bei Fiatk
■'Si; Olin, iOW U0 9 teadr, 00» riTOll 3
Linco Golden Gasoline Power-full Gas, Giving Clean Performance Throughout The Entire Speed Range
And At The Price of Regular Gasoline
17.2c Per Gallon
High Point Oil Co.
[nkral auto repair Lr Washing, Greasing [vulcanized. Battery Service Gas and Oil- Storage p Tire 8. Bittery Service I Jackson Phone 790
assified ads
For Sale—
KALE: Black mare, sound and i) , r, weight 1400 lb., 7 years s : y Ueber, 3 miles north of 7-eod-3p. MIT Hanging lamp, wash l-l pitcher, trunks, 50 lb. size jt ,i wardrobe, dining table, l), : . Cheap. John Cook Jr., hington St. Phone 565-X. Ip
C»i
TALE: Twenty head Angora |n', cheap. See F. A. Wilson, p itltwi-st Greencastle just Vattan road or write R. R. 2, l 8-4t |yALE: Small writing de.-k, [imiitiire Exchange, east si<ie Plione 170-L. 9-2t. County Community Sale, |cl,' \ igust 12. All kinds of and miscellaneous articles. Wed-tf
SALE: Good Yellow ear Ra<v" n. Call Fall Bros. 176 lulale or Fincastle Phones. Ill-i; 8-1M0-11-12-IJ-fip
ISAl.E: Good yearling Here0. B. Lane, Bainbridge. 5-9-2p.
—For Rent—
i Thm unfumiAied Ji . i po 'in', loi go deaet, I and garage Henry ] Hit, s. College 9-3p.
—Miscellaneous—
NOTICE:
and property insurance see Roy Hillis, 19 south Indiana street. Phone 826-Y. 21-eod-tf.
CHICKEN DINNER 35c at Crawfond’s Restaurant Thursday. It
.t« •*« *J.
•F CLOVERDALE •F By Mrs. Clara Dorsett .t. **. ej* •*«
(piite ill, is reported lietter.
Miss Kathleen Coffin of IndianaFor farm, automobile ' l M,|is visited with I'-latives here Sun-
day
Miss Madonna Owens of Terre Haute Normal spent the weekend with home f< Iks. Mother. Club held their picnic at the home of Mrs. Os ar MeKamey last Tuesday. Stitch and Chatter club will meet with Miss Elliott at the home of her istet, Mrs. Carrie Cline. Smiling Workers 4-H dub will give a play Tuesday evening at 8 o’clock. They will give an exhibition of their work. Miss Virginia Ruark returned home Saturday after visiting in Crawfordsvilh. Mi- Ora Day,. Mrs Hazel Owens, Mrs. Hazel Bryan, Mis.- Butha Coffin, Mrs. Johnnie Wade and Mrs. Will Gli-lewell attended the home economics club picnic at Warien township List Wednesday.
Rev, Ashby i f Russellville filled the pulpit at the First Christian church here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe McAvoy and daughter of Zanette, Pa., came last Saturday for a week’s visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Pike McAvoy. Mr. and Mrs. Otha Smythe attend- • d church at Old Deer Creek Sunday. Mrs. Maliala O’Jdapiel and Mrs. May Wood of Greencastle called on Mr. and Mis. Ed Clearwater Sunday
afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Elijah Holloway attended the Holloway reunion Sunday it Plainfield. Mrs. Frank Kizer of Chicago came Saturday for a visit with her brother Flstes Dun an and wife. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Corns and
•§• -J- -I- *i* -J* -F T
I VST MARION + By Mrs. Amy Buis ♦
i ,j. ,j. *j, -j- -J- *•* William Yount is visiting relatives j at Danville. ML, and will attend the
World’s F’air at Chicago.
I Miss Eva SI,-irons is visiting with
Mr. and Mrs. Chaliner Miles and yj r . <ll( | Mis. Oran Bbis and daughter,
daughteis were at iBrazil Sundat to
called on Mrs. Heniy Oshorn Saturday afternoon. Dr. and Mrs. Fid St' wai l of Indianapolis, Mr. and Mr-. Killie Steward and granddaughtei of nc ii Danville and Mrs. Mable lyiak of Indianapolis called on Mrs \m Hylton Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Steward of Indianapolis spent last week with Mr- ; Nan Hylton. Jimmie and Bubl' c Alexander I spent a few days last week with their grandparents, Mr. and Mr F re 1
Rogers.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Summers of Bridgeport spent from Friday until Monday with Card Sun iei Jake Summers spent M"lida\ with hi- . i.-ter, Mrs. Frank l!"gers Mr. and Mrs. Boli Summers of Bridgeport, Mr. and Mrs. i ird Sum | mers, Jake Summers ai.d Jue Smith 1 , spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. I Frank Rogers. i .Mr. and Mrs. Ren S Tom n attended ‘he MoKamey reun a at Fiankfott Sun-lay. Mrs. Solon, u remained for J i few days visit. Mrs Viable Gerli k md children ot Indianapolis spent last week with | VI rs. Vergie Solum, Raymond Beck -pent Sunday witli Albert Solomon. Mr. and Mrs. ClirtVrd Shinn called
KIM': 7-room dwelling, 305 lain ,t treet, in good repair, jLtMe. Choice location. Will llsunably. Phone 661. 9-2t
attend the Young reunion. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Walters and Mr. and Mrs. Forest Hurst returned home Sunday from a week’s outing at Ho<>sier Highland. Mrs. Nannie Fultz spent the weekend at Bloomington. Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Allen returned Sunday after spending a week in Chi-
cago.
Mis. Ira Whitaker of Martinsville came Saturday for a visit with her sisters, the Misses Laura and Belle
Long.
Mr. and Mrs. George MeKamey were 6 o’clock dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Lyon at Greencastle Satuiday evening. Mrs Nellie McDonal left Monday afternoon for a few days’ visit at
RENT:- New 5-room house, hr:,.- • at 503 Maple Ave. Int \\ aahiagton* ■'
I Rl NT: M " lei n t li I e, and foui fc 'laments, 632 east Seminary
lb at, water and gas Atovei " , i . ,
Bed Mrs C . J. Arnold. Phone
7-9-1 l-.^t
I . ., I M I * • . ' r i dll I * »• * ■ rum 11 n ll i • vs . .
.Mi> os Monice and Margaret Bur-Penrod Tl,urs.lay morning, g, -. spent last week with their | Miss Myrtle Osboin .pent Wednesgrandparents. Mr. and Mrs. E E da > ni fy ilnd Thul>d *y wlth Mrs '
Henry Oshorn.
Miss Flossie Hanks of near (liecii castle spent last week with Ren Solo-
man.
Buis.
Cecil Newman and family visited Sunday with Homer Slavcns and family at * linton F alls. Reese Buis Jr. and family of Indianapolis were visitors with G. G. Buis
and family.
Mr. and Mr*. Lester Storm and daughter were Sunday visitors with Mia. Myrtle Storm and family. Sunday visitors with Oran Buis and family were Mrs Ida Newman, Miss Lessb- C< \, Miss Eva Slavens and Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Newman. Mrs. Myrtle Monday spent a few days Li t week with Mr. land Mj». A.
E. Lamberts.
Mr. and Mis E. K Bi|is called ,jn
Bloomington with Mr. and Mrs 1 . in ,| \|| S .] u Ji n Masten Sunday.
' " - .Vi
Mooie and Miss Jane Comstock. Mr. and Mrs. Clarice Allen of In dianapolis speht the weekend with hei parents Mr. amt Mrt». Woody Mc-
Kanejtj • '
Mr and Mrs. George Knoy were
afternorn
•F -F «F 8* BKI.I.K 1 MON H\ Iniogene Hurst •F -F *F 8*
Hi NT: Campbell apartment. 1,1' liable, roomy, and reason-
V t Call 141-Y. 7-3p Brown Sunday.
RENT: One four room and one l 1 103 West Jacob street. | dollars per month. See R. P.
8-2t.
Miss Maxine Morrison spent the weekend at Hoosier Highland
Mrs. Vllx-rt Alice has been ill for
the past week.
Melon Smedley visited Miss Nellie
Mr and Mrs. Mitchel of Putnam Kivett last week,
ville 'called on Mr. and Mrs. Or., Mr and Mrs. R ss Allen and Mr.
I nd Mrs. Freeman Goodpasture attended t’e World's Fair four days
8- : last week.
Mi. and Mrs. Will Arnold an<| j. daughter Dorr,thy visited Ivan T.eon-
Miss Frances Piper was a guest of aid .Monday night.
Mr amf Mrs L„is Zeinei Saturday | Mis' Inmgene Hurst spent last Mr. and Mr*. M„n lav night with Miss Avis Cooper. night. 1 ‘ -
4- -F 8" Fll.l MORE
By Mrs. C.lidewell •F ♦ ♦
-Wantetf—
InTED: Young woman, one with | Miss Mary Gollaway of Crawfords < ""i' 11 ,i,,,uit s ' pant and fountain experience vil i, is visiting Miss Margaret Ruark. Spencer, has been visiting fc'- A^iress S, care Banner. Ip I Miss Flossie Smiley is visiting this l^< w,-e . ^ ^ ^ ^
Eva Scott.
»"•
|',8, Greencastle. We pay all John Wachtel Co. 24-tf
INTED: Ford or Chevrolet dump 'mock Trucking Co. Inquire at House, Cloverdale. 8-3p.
—Lost— P 1 Fan :,mi white Collie pup. P to name of Merry. Reward. 1°»-K. ptf
—Found—
Proctor reunion
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Alters, north of town. | Mrs Ada Robinson and children v
Sm.. Ann M~r
guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Henry |-F
Nichols.
Mrs. Neila Carroll and
8-
*!• ej. •'* •!*
PALESTINE +
Mis. Henry Oshorn
4. + 8- 8* 8-
Mrs. Clarence Beck and daughter. Miss j Mrs Frank Buckle and Miss Ruth
« r ; n.a W» N„l. an., „n
Z< ' iner henn'- of Mr. Imd Mrs. Iva Ted am! Mr. and Mrs ^ .nH . hiltlren railed on Charlie Miller
Sunday afternoon.
BASEBALL RESULTS American Association Indianapolis, 7; St. Paul, 0. Milwaukee, 3; Toledo, 2 (ten i ning-s-) Minneapolis, 11; Louisville, 6 CVdumbus. 4: Kansas City. 2. American League Philadelphia, 7: Boston, 6 Washington, 6; New York, IChicago at St. I mis (played a.pnrt of double-header Sunday) fOnly games sKheduled ) 'V.A 1 f ‘c National laague Brooklyn. 1: New York, 0 (eleven innings). Chieagsi, 4; St. lamia, 2PTrilaHelphia at Boston (played in double-header Sunday.) (Only games scheduled). KITTY LEAGUE S< ORES 'I’uesday Mullins 14; Phi Delta 6. KITTY LEAGUE SCHEDULE Wednesday I. O O F. vs. Lone Stars. Thursday Double Decker vs Beverly Hills
at the Nichols.
Miss Amy Zeiner, Robert Ragan and Theodore C.lidewell reUimeil from
' ,l l-adies black traveling ana inr,,-.-"-
lee Mr*. Clarenen MaCammack lake Sh k*n »k Sundnjf |e Union. lp “
ake , . , , Mrs. Unie Hunter, who has been
lei No’l returned home Thutsday
fiom 0 trip to St., L uis-
League Standing Team Mullins Double Decker Beverly Hills Sam Hanna’s Phi Delts I. O. 0. F. I.one Star
L. 0 1 1 2 3 4 • 4
Pet. 1000 .800 .667 600 .400 ..000 .000
Mill a Hip iu - Mi*. Donnie Shrith and cMldrtm ccr.nect.on
BAINBRIDGE WINS ITie Bainbridge indepen lent ha e j Iwll team won both ends of a double header fr om the Roachdale semi pm club Sunday after,, on by scores of b
to 5 knd 13 t« 7.
For the remainder of the seasim the Bainbridge player* are anxious to | schedule tilts on a horre-home basis. Team managers are requested to | write Ray Morris, Bainbridge. in thD
SYNOPSIS Shortly after her mother’s death, M«ry Kennedy, young and pretty stenographer decides to live her ojtu life and avoid the poverty she has always known. She rents a small room and then seeks a position. Mary meets Buck Landers, elderly sports promoter, who proposes to her. She does not love Landers, but his wealth attracts hsi. Without waiting for Mary’s decision, Landers presents her with a diamond ring He threatens anyone who comes between them. Mary meets Landers' ward, Steve Moore, young college graduate. They are immediately attracted to one another. Landers leaves on a business trip and asks Steve to look after Mary. They dine and dance and are extremely happy until mention of Mary's engagement spreads a pall over their spirits. Mary tells Steve she does not want to marry Landers.
CHAPTER XII. a STRANGE blinding exoitcsouthing skin t. fear / w paralyzed speech between them for a matter of seconds. Tension, conflict united them. They were both pushing hard against a stone wall and the stone wall was
Life.
“I don’t think I’m exactly the person to tell you what to do,” Steve said, his voice tight. A film of tears threatened in the flower-blue of Mary’s eyes. “I know how you feel, Steve—but
but— ”
“Mary, you poor kid ...’’ A queer, distressed smile wreathed her lips. “I suppose you had better take me home now,” she said illogically. “You're not going home yet,” he returned sharply. “If you’re in wrong I’m not going to throw you down. Hut aren’t you making too much of all this? If you don’t want to marry Buck—why, you don’t
bav# to.”
“It’s hard for me to throw' him flat,” she said painfully. An inward struggle was darkening Steve's clear gray eyes. “It would be an awful crash for a man like Buck. It would just about wreck his ego, Mary. He s proud as Lucifer — if he wa a cheaper man people would call it vanity. If you pilled him his gang wouldn't dare horse him about it, but they'd snicker behind his back, and he’d know it. 1 think I know why he wants to marry you. You’re young and beautiful and you’re straight. You’re different— you’re Buck’s symbol of superiority —you’re the badge of his final success. He's getting ready to drop all
the other stuff.”
“If I loved him it wouldn’t mat-
ter,” she said.
"I’m knocking Buck to you and I’ve no right to do it,” Steve said, suddenly severe with himself. “I can't work against a man who’s done as much for me as Buck has. My support and my education came from him. I’m living on his bounty right now. I’m staying in his quar-
ters at the hotel.”
With a start, Mary recognised that she, tort, was a creature of Buck Lander's bounty. He was re sponsible for her position at the hotel at a much better salary than she could have earned elsewhere. She was living on the money that he had thus provided. He had given her a diamond ring worth a year's salary. Was that the secret of his success? Did he bind people to him this way. and then command their lives like a czar? But that was too harsh; be was generous, he took
nothing without giving liberally in
return.
“Why did you engage yourself to Buck if you don’t love him?” Steve’s gray eyes were distressed. They had both forgotten that they were in a popular and somewhat noisy restaurant. The music and the dancing filled the place, yet they were unaware of either within their electric circle of selfinterest. The interchange of magnetism, between them was suppressed and they both struggled against it, but it dissolved all formality; began seriously to threaten their ultimate reticence one with (he other. To talk of her engagement to Steve brought something of the release of the confessional to Mary. It w as easy now for her to pour out the whole story of her connection with Landers. It was a simple tale, devoid of discernible evil, but it was potent enough to snarl all of her emotions, to change the whole current of her life. Steve’s face whitened a little when she told him of Lander's kisses and embraces. “That’s how it happened," she concluded. “You’re the only soul
I’ve told.”
The pupils of Steve’s eyes were a litllo dilated; there was an unfamiliar set about his mouth. "Dd like to tell you a lot of things, Mary,” he hesitated. “Really . . . hut, no, I’ve simply gut no right to talk.” He looked away from her. She managed to smile. They were both becoming, she thought, a bit ridiculous. "I’m sorry I bothered you with all my gloom,” she sniiL “Shull we dance some more?” He smiled, hut there was more desperation than humor In the
grimace.
“1 don’t care about dancing right
now," he said.
“Honestly, this whole business has put my nerves on edge and I want to get away from it, Steve. I want to . . . forget it . . "You don’t know what yflu’re
talking about!”
He was right. There was a strange new hunger in her heart, mingled with a vague unhappiness. At the moment there were no petty cautions, no inhibitions under guard. She looked straight at Steve; there was nothing about him to fear. With any other man it would have been different vastly different. At most she merely contemplated now a joyous relief from her uncertainty about Hfe, the acid drop of fear that was in her heart. And there was another element which she did not name even in her own mind—a swaying, a yearning of her heart towards Steve Moore. There was something about him . .. “Oh, Steve, I feel so sunk tonight -and I’m kind of happy, too," she said in a gust of honesty. "Tomorrow I’ll he hack in harness and worrying all by myself but tonight it’s wonderful to have you to
talk to—”
Somehow he had grown stern. Yet, she sensed, he wasn’t cold. There was a force within him, rigorously held under pressure. "I’ll tell you what you’re going do, Mary,” he said levelly
“You’re going straight home. Maybe you don’t know it, but you’re fooling with dynamite. We both are. And it might be a good idea for us not to see each other alone again until Buck Landers gets back. Do you know what I mean?" She could feel a tide of color rising in her face, but Steve was wrong. He thought he was making a vast decision, but in her feminine heart she knew that it was all up
to her , , .
Mary was stirred with the acute realization that she had power over Steve Moore. She could tell it by the way he looked, by the tone of his voice. Oh, he adopted a masculine superiority, but every little feminine instinct, each as sensitive as an unseen dictaphone, told her that he had come under her spell. At first she hadn’t realized it; she had been thinking of the exquisite poignancy of her own feelings. She was excited, her emotions were deliciously unstable. Never before had any man made her feel that way ... It was like a rush of Springtime la the blood , . . “I’m going to take you home right now,” lie repeated, with more conscience than purpose in his
voice.
It was satisfying to sense—victory. It actually amounted to that. It was even pleasant to sense Steve’s distress at her connection with Buck Landers. More, it gave her a small perverse pleasure to show a touch of coldness. “Very well, let’s go,” she said. "I’m a little tired, anyway.” His reaction was almost audible. “It’s all over—she’s gone back into her shell!” he seemed to be thinking. "She sees that 1 fell too easy, and now she’s tired.” He said aloud: "Yes, home’s the best place for you I’ve been talking too much. I’m sorry.” "Not at all,” she said politely. But her momentary pretense of aloofness spent itself. She was over taxed with feeling; her reserve forces were being consumed. Steve Moore was afraid of something, and she shared his fear. A subtle fear, like a faint, rare poison. It was beginning to spread through them, stifling emotion, paralyzing passion. Moments of apprehension shot through with quivers of fugitive happinessrevolving sensations, conflicting around the heart. In the taxi going home, it was Steve who isoloted the reason of their disharmony and put it into words. He spoke almost with difficulty. "Is it because you’re afraid of Buck?" A realization came to Mary like .. sharp icicle of truth that Steve hod dragged something from her subconscious self into the light. Deep down there had, from the beginning, been a buried sense of mcnAlways, remotely, she had felt, with a tiny dread, the cold danger behind the unheated eye* of Buck lenders. “Maybe you're right,” she returned in a small voice. "Things oughtn’t be that way," Steve blurted. , Their depression grew a piling up of balked impulses. Mary felt the invasion of vague, sinister thoughts. Was it really fear of Buck Landers that had risen and finally poisoned her evening with
Steve?
“You're not happy and -just f> r your own sake—I’d like to help you," he said gently. "But it's a Jam delicate situation for me ——" She nodded. "Is It awfully hard for you to tell Buck the truth that you don’t want to marry him?” She thought a moment, ther answered, softly;
"Yes.”
“I ought to be able to help yo out of all this,” he said deliberately "I got into it alone,” she returned “I ought to be able to handle it my self without setting you ugains Mr. Landers.”
(To B« Continued) Ooeyriekt, King t eaturee Si ndiaate, In*.
