New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 15, 1929, Page 12

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERATD MONDAY, JULY 15, 1920. @ dutoret || AL 0 h;,;;;;n;;a;;g,d;;,,:m,:;; SEVEH BY POLICE of Passport to Woman Who Only | et - “Affirmed” Suppert to Constitutien il SERVICE ING “Oh!" The word was a little wai | | loved your mind and your brave of puin. She forced herselt to con- | ine soul long before 1 loved your THIS HAS HAPPENED /a thick lens of tears makes a poor |brown eyes, blazing with anger. | fess —that night—when you'd | body. I loved you in those ways ‘Nlrmganqe Plei' lgm Cu Nan Carroll, secretary, is in love reading medium. raked his suddenly perturbed and |gone to see Nina Blackhull—" from the very first, but physicauy | 0 jay i 3 ’ with her employer, John Curtis| No, she 1ldn't go on like this | anxious face. “You made me go,” he reminded |1 was enslaved to another woman Ramed_Wheel IS med | Definite Defiance of Su- Former Actress Hurt Morgan, criminal lawyer, who is|any longer. ~Why should she?| “Bert Crawfoid:” Nan flung the|her. “I didn’t care a damn about| When she was—gone, 1 was free| U } : Ao In Paris Auto Accident doemy in love with his wife, Iris, | Every day was torture, every night | words at him. “You think I ever|a murder case that night, but yowd |to discover and fall in love with ® preme Court Decision,| . n Larly A0 . fent Nan decides to resign but lingers |a hell of loneliness and crushed |cared the snap of my finger for |held yourself aloof all day, and at|your beauty— et e e | Paris, July 15 rs. Wa when she learns Morgan is to de- | hope. Curtis had put it with ter- | that—that—" She bit back the dimfer poor, funny little Curtis had | “I'm not beautiful” Nan pro- | p eyi M yuncers in the jungle, Burton Says in Letter to ierce. former American actress and fend a supposed friend, Bert Craw- |vifying clarity: “Poor Nan! Father | word “crook™ just in time. Why dis- [said terrible ! th‘mgs !mconruously‘::'flml.‘:wll(;ll:r fsglln:n n:,\n;(...l;;ye. [ e [ite of tho Américan panter and ford. take ‘hopes’ and I take his|illusion him ncw, when she hai —but go on, darling—" |ing (e B G e S e e Qe A s et or:ner Crawford’s acquittal, he | ‘love’ before she can—" protected him all these months?—-| *“You hadn't kissed me," Nan ac- | Iris—" | Stimson on Detzer Case. | former Harvara lided about the floor oblivious to | = ¥ R i teaves town and Iris follows clos<ly Ior three months he had daily that lady-killer?” she amended. [ cused him. *You hadn't even said o, thank God!" he agreed fer- \5”_‘,‘“”2 Tt dite e hiinnie atvainsiol fered painful IB1UHce "f““dd) in She writes Morgan she will never | given her a tiav modicum of hope, | but the force of her vehement pro-|you loved e, and— No, let me vently : Not ifka Iris. Her beautv | music to which they danced, state > 3 b an u\’.mnu»)lnl‘ev:\n-luv!\(‘(\njl l‘mln\ veturn but cleverly omits reference | only to kill it, by a casual good- | test was spoiled. “Oh, John! How [ finish, John! When you had gone, I is devilish, yours is—divine. Now |,nq jocal police late last night quiet- | Washington, July 15 (P—Revoc a- | pas under treatment of her phys to Crawford, whom Morgan {rusts t Kiss on her cheek or fore- Stupid, how . blind you are! Rert|went into the library and there,|— is it all sud? Can we be—|)y yaided an adjoining room. = ar-|tion of the passport granted Dorothy |Cians S St o £ vl implicitly. Nan saves Morgan from sad or hand. For three months Crawford! T could laugh! 1 could among your law books, I found a h“m'f 4 ; | :d two men and scized $224 and | l!r:u r, secretary of the \\'mmn s To- | \ Inulf):‘ 101(?) HI\ x”mvl\ ls\v ‘\\y"t lespair by forcing him more deep- had striven with every ingenu- |laugh myself sick!” she went nn book of poens. I read the oneyouwd | But, womaalike, Nan could not Roulette wheel, among other | Lerational League for Peace and riding T fnlllTU.UnH?J.‘» ly into his work. She acts as long known to a woman in love to hysieically, and proved it by burst- [ been reading a few days hefore, for forbear to ask the forbidden ques- ¥ | Freedom, is sought by R. Kalph But- driven by Miss Barbara Harrison of distance housekeeper ~for him for T love ind she had into a wild fit of laughter whose | you'd left a marker in it tion, the one question \hich = sh nk Morse of this place and |!on, F"lh(dl counsel of the Daugi:- \~\\ Yok, (mu.m:»v of llmlfw b, Zi%- months, winning the love of lit- ed. Sne had made his homs a | final note broke on a sob A poem?” he frowned, in ap- | should have avoided above ail oih- | John Fornier of ~Irovidence were |LCrS of the American Revolution. |Ifarrison, former governor Hgmn-!.:l tle Curtis, his son, and bringing haven of comfort and peace and | “Nan, darling! What is the parently genuine bewilderment. ers. “But John—whzat if you saw |the men arrested. but the police de- |2cting on his own behalf in the ab- jof the llnl.{‘vr-n]\{s- Mis Hern }n\” Somfort a man who ironically | beauty. She had mothered his boy matter? T don't understand— Nan quotc that last dreadful Iris again?" clared they would push an investi-|Sence of his client's officials from wa only \.h,Jvnl.\‘\mum» but her thinks only of another. until the boy's own mother would “let me go!" She jerked her | stanza He did not try to lie to her. Per- |gation in an effort to apprehend | Washiniton. . Cangatas »llvmolh red. e Nan returns from her har exams, | scarcely have known him, so splen- | hand from his, and sprang up from | . | haps it would have been better if those “higher up”. A checkbook Sees Defiance of Law Mrs. Pierce, v“‘;'.o ‘:\df \vv!o“ln‘__nn and Morgan proposes fo her. He di- | didly healthy and happy and nor- | the desk so precipitately that she | " And T shall find some girl | he had lied. Certainly a great deal |found With the confiscated money | Issuance of the passport after Miss | the stage as J\i\ -Hljl} \1.1\;1\. ol i vorces Iris, and Nan and are|mal he had become. She had |overturned her chair. Before he perhaps, that happened later might have |contained no names. Two slot ma- | Dotzer had been allowed to “affirm” |15 years ago pa%ul “l:ums‘:v e i married brought father and son into such | could circle the desk she was| And a better one than you {been very different if he had. His|chines were seized beside the Rou- [to “support” to “defend” it, he con- old Irohman prod m} Tons s, ey 2 close companionship and congeni- | through the door. The slam of 1:s| With eves as wise, but kindlier, answer came slowly, conscientious- |lette wheel. |tends in a letter to Secretary Stim- above the bridge of her nose, undes ality that an ecditorial writer for a | closing was like a slap in his face,| And 1ips as soft, but true, ly I — don't know. 1 can only| Le Touquet in past years has been |son, was an “almost open defianc the lips, and on both knees. > 1;| And 1 daresay she will do.'” say, ‘Nan, T love you with all my|an exclusive retreat for the Dier's!of the supreme court decision refus- They are prevented from Roing on their honeymoon by the arrival ] of David Blackhull, accused of the | Woman's magazine would have|but what did she care now that Morgan stay and take the two. She had worked ou his|fled up the stairs to her room. For thres months Nan's and |cases with a brilliance and zeal|Hadn't she known all evening that ; < . | Which not even the old Nan of pre-|she couldn’t go on any longer? Let Morgan's marriag on hich not ) ger” Let 1 4 g e ing 5 [m.f( Bt Nun's hewnt 15k ing. | marriage days had dreamed pos- | him think that his insult had driven || e at him with wide, solemn cyes, |descent on the Pier since 1923 when | 3 in Prague, asked and received por- | Thres monthe ta the day after the |Sible. And for reward she had— |her away. Let him think anything | ne o sl ard | jonn Curtis Morgan, 1 love yon | Police closed several places | mission to take the oath customanly | Scrawny But e e Il hereslr N can execiivenotting. Ib. dhoss. 1E GRS sl o oo [0 BT His BisE stans | with all my heart and soul and | — |eranted to conscientious objectors Tois : 1 g Al that mattered—she told herself, |« ‘Your ha v dear, adorable, |Mind. And thank you for loving | I against warfare several weeks afcer ] on like this. Fate was wait Your hands, my dear, adorable, | ; not go on like thi ] y ! as she Jeried opon the door of her|l Teue lios me,” she added childishly, as she | A HH ¥ A the Rosika Schwimmer decision was Ot or ng Her hushand's puzzled frown did | /G0, B30 FO0. SpC B i 0 o e ey e s “I — see,” she said very quietly |club and opened to the general Then, raising h>r head, she looked |Public. The raid was the first such not clear. I never read any such poem, darling Nan— Schwimmer, Miss Detzer, desiring to attend a They Ca“ed er meeting of her organization Aug A ar A Nan insists | burbled with joy as he described | was all over. she sobbed, as she heart and soul and mind. 1 hope |smartest society. This year, how- ‘m: to grant naturalization to Rosika “No? \ou don’t remember these ing for her ultimatum, ready to ac- Oh. of course—Nan reminded her- of tenderness read. Ir 2 . clothes e 5 5 v | flung her arms a ook cad 1 that decision, the supreme cept the challenge. self bitterly—he appreciated her |ClOthes closet—was that she had{_Oh, I've loved you faithfully |flung her arms about his ncck. cision, the supr reached e end f her rope. She ' 3B C TINUE. court, by a y e, a NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY | work as housekeeper, mother and | 'C2°hed the end of her rope. Sh and well, \ZOBRICONTINUED) B e i | By the United Press. o CHAPTER XXXIIL law partner. He was not chary of | *2S through, through! She had| Three years, or a bit less— T Yesterday's Hero — Bing Miller d aliens must ‘swear to | 15 your face drawn and pinched When, that Wednesday . | praise. And of course there was |{ried her best and she had failed, p [who tripled with two on base in | 0°fcN4” the constitution, = |your skin flabby? Are your chucks the third monthly anniversary some nourisnment for her starving | e ob it they did still need her But Morgan interrupted, giving | the tenth inning to enable the Phila- | <‘-‘"“‘"'~' _\L’.HHN Country” sunken with great hollows unLe.rl her marriage to John Curtis Mor- | n in secing him slowly lose the |SNC Was sick unto death of think- | ine last line himseif: * ‘It wasn't a | <. [ delphia Athlctics to heat the In. | Saving the Women's International Cee G Sl RO gan, the little Curtis loudly clam- |tragic shadows from his decp-set | 'N& Of them all tne time. of crucify- | success.! Poor Nan! I rcad no fur- p dians, § to 3, and gain & full panie | 1281 is Working to reduce legisly- | becoming angles inst ad of “‘ he ored for a game of a 15, Nan k eyes, in sceing his lean body her love every day on the €ross | ther than that first verse and ih ' on their American League rivals. | U\e appropriations for state militia |softly rounded slimness of youth? had no presentiment that a crisis | become less lean. Oh, ves, she had self-sacnifice; beginning of the next: “Thank God d — .u | and opposes citizens' military train- All these conditions rob you r.f She was cramming dresses inlo a | (hat s e e % The Yankees lost a step in the |iNE camps and military training in | attractiveness and make you look e s e R T e e oo W el e i S e S S 0 pennant chase when George Pip- | COlleges, Burton's letter declares: | old. But worst of all, these may Iy graterul, Buf what had he given | TUPLd her. Her heart leaped. ON [ God, (hat's done :;u Hoavywp]gh Cl}ampmq rass blew up after- holding the | I Can sce mo reason that this actually he symptoms of simple vy modern school- |her? Well, a chance to serve himt |SOUlAN't she ever learn not to hope “You mean—?2" Nan quivered Tigers scoreless for six innings ar | Woman should be allowed to hav: a | anaemia—that ailment R sl Lo S ; : Let him knock! . . . Slowly. jerk- | . o S 1 i Jetroit. New York lost the game, 7 | Dassport of the United States, which | often suffered by women 1 iniroduced the game of |Once that would have heen enough |t I BhOCE: - o . Slowly. derk- [ on. john, don't lie to me now EJS Taldock 1 U[S;dy e SENeGILLE IS G e B e e s e nagrams into her classroom as a | for Nan, but now it was not enough. | 1 N it door to | bhear the truth, if you love | 4 3. George Uhle held the cham. [Implies if iy I IOn RRERee o ROl R Aot novel but effective aid in' the teach- | She had earned more— everything. | OP°0 0 her hushand. G G e pions to seven hits. | with the use of the army and navy, | Co; ablets to put on firm flesh, - R 5 5 k: = = i when she fefuses to take the usual | round out face and figure and build ing of spelling and definitions. And | And since his love for Iris could i oAt “I'm trying to tell you the truth. | New York, July 15 (P—James J. ——e et : e Curtis had become so enamored of | not dic, he had no coin with whien | ! APTER XXXV Nan,” he interrupted gravely. He o g ; Jaal-@mussciEnald in eSS Toniglioatiilofiallseancy nichiish s ol o g . L e i i For the first time since she had Sk = Draddock’s attempts 1o 1lift the npiowns 1o (hree hits and Bo: State supreme court has said is re- No if you need a few pounds of e game that he sted upon a to pay his debt to her. To his| o t heid her away from hinr for a mo- : A £ 5 (St o dilanarin flesh to round out the hollows, if session of anagrams with his|credit be it said—Nan veminded | (M 10 occupy it three months |, e then stosped and lifted her BNt heavyweight crown off Tommy won. in the former city, 5 to 2 | auisite o citizenship 3 Siliee’ ani etony SR e e T e eC [ hefore, John Curtis Morgan stepped | | ok srow this week furnishes| The White Sox were helpless he- | mm——— = ousvant fepeetibaci loL melencEy father and stepmother every eve- | hersclf with a bitter smile—he had into his arms, carried her to the | Lougl s brow this week furnish ! b 1 D GeSShe The jargest fight gate on record and -health, get a box of McCoy's A sl into his wife's bedroom an fore the ‘fine pilching sarlani ning after dinner. not tried to pay in counterfeit. - Nan | g pig armchair that the room of- | metropolit = o fistic | fore the fine pitching of Garlani sl el s R thoii i They had been engrossed about 10 ving deator Morgar, [ClinSInE to the knob, retreated slows | o> 215 BUASIAE LISt (A8 EEAM (I melropolilan followers of the BUE o ion ot Ghicago, ang! lost fo| Was the: Tunney-Dempsey fight at|Tablets loday. Just a short freatl- minutes this evening with the little | interrupted e doorway. |Iv to make way for him. His face £ Bh. S i qustry with their first real cham- Washingt fo 1. chicago, which ran to 0000z mentiwilimakesvouriookgand gics] lay, child-smifl, i his lap, her head the ton Senators, T ke s } . . s was flushed but W G : Rl DanL ot e sans ike a mew person. wooden letters when Curt See any loopholes in the case>| "d8 oM i ,‘I_‘, f'”” With deter- ;oqinst his breast, so that she coul? | Pionship hout of the scason. ; o e e 2 = == | McCoy takes all ‘he risk—Read phantly formed the word * [ vnt e oo nl e hmoratn = UIRE SO BRI ART Enob e i aRd i oy 8 oW v s 8 s eare (eiie Rattlen e S aunceni s adding it to the three other words|when the case opens?” order of the room. the half-packed that siill incomplete marriage | given him peace of a sort, content- The Giants and St. Louis divided G F11 (1T S e T o G L e B .\h”\; fr | this ironclad guarantec. It after tal : suitcase; his hlack eyes bored as well as to his words. “You must | feid &) Sfou e eadoniau aiiaion) (M 93 B ing 4 sixty cent boxes of MecCoy's he had captured Nan bowed her head lower over | Sultcase; his black s bored info 5w he began haltingly, “how | 9aY night. : Graw’s men winning the first, 7 to 23 PIECE TEA SET Tablets or 2 One Dollar boxes any & o £o 93 ) A o o | hers ] Z The advance odds fa ighran |6, i nin ind los he & < : 5 bl Only trouble is, it's too easy to | the papers. so that he might not s SE it was with me. You saw—us to- lietad yandclon dsire soriCoNshramlh Sin S iinnin nd losing th GIVEN AWAY thin, underweight man or woman AR e R e Al e an i AT e el e L = : " |to outpoint the Bdaddock. the cur- |second, 4 fo 3. St. Louis threaten- e S i el s SR qu his volce was! “What did | Bether for thres years, Would you |, /"0 totion heing around 2 to 1. |ed to win the first game with ERCHANTSH GIRT: NIGHDS | idoesnicisainfat least vs apoundsean “There! 1 knew I'd lose it nsilisxe ol cin Sl t o na | R ol i e B e ceiaRtnsHig oSt hanpviman) nmmlo e R R s s n “"_‘l" S feel completely satisfied with the did yoy have to get 'E' o quick, explain that the jovial teasing at- T BT d i Ao mail e e Nan2i 5 'nj“ ];fi-’ ?l i L i m\l:‘: W‘ k]m“’" ‘]‘ 0y ""i B "" ork tied THURSDAY NIGHT marked improvement in health— Nan? titude of her hushand’s legal col bl 2 i y “No,” she whispered. Her fingers [ 4¥Ramite in nis right arn AUE )R S SQ0TERATLdRSENIT o SLo Victony CAPITOL THEA7G vour druggist is authorized to re- His stepmother grinned at 1 < | leagues toward the great criminal | Urgd with curious violence at odds. It he can pierce Lough- The second game was a pitchers : 2 uak | : is = ;r\n.myu r grinned at him as | leagues towar e great crimina, “I won't tell you—anything!” she | (00K fierce Told on the lapel of | & et _],l i Battle waikar ailonedt of “ ke turn the purchase price, T e L e P et aitiiz atoon i on | e cost T GIRadtet e emary o R Ul B Rl L CRE R e s i the word info “hope. : Nl Lol el e TSI e e e e e Conin e v T R Rr A o Sl R T S Sl el sttt snn s ibres et d And herc's an Which T canit | wir in_fact. a5 wel as I e | “I've got to know!" He was al. | NCD that it wasn't all a dream. TR e e e o anything with.” his father said she would have gloated over their a £ . Slavalin lopiaze N tene De s 2 dle- hits a d passts with pretended discouragement, s | pleasantrics. . . . "The case looks ””’*]' shouting at her, and the flush an{]‘““; :‘)'),:"’\H‘M'K”‘ :;'"c:"“‘f); ‘\:’l" eleht and DovalShads Galrorala |Ticst: e s 2 i 3 2 , | on his grim, lean face grew e > S - 1 vete ¢ . e - — pelad che loden dn d0o Tool alons | wateninhs s (L ses yon i Bave |l oile . oL | Dot i e ot ec ey thet T e l';n',':r. ‘(Z ',yln f“,flhl o ';‘"“d Cineinnati defeated Brooklyn, 12 with an " and a “K” already |the last o .uluA-IISvallmnw‘ Sl e T e n‘vl».v!n: and ?1 : A;mu\ |lr ingioaiipostenien b ok \r“ e ut T can make it ‘hopes. " Nan : pect & thing, does he?t |, FAR'S hands released (he Biaoel Uahin o antre o AT e, Bast Side middle- | day. I v pitchers v triumphed, annexing the * 3 b and neither does Nina f rer cheeks, pressed weight, in another ten rounder. ble to check the Reds. Humbert Fugazy has arranged a —= === the pool and discarding Ul 5o far &alD Bnanil dio. |nard infosthem ibutisherald inot oo bet asidimisoniian (eeline gthat) “E” she had drawn from tF |s{gan answered, his deep voice |t0 hide her eyes from him. she|!t made you angry to see us to-] ., ppots Field , Wednesday M Pers o 2 Ten Persons Injured night that may take some of the of face-down letters. throbbing with triumph. “If noth. | had never looked so proud as sh-|Sether—= = 5 “Whew!" Curtis leaned excitedly | ing slips up. Nam, we'll get a dis- | 911 in~ her monent of supreme hu- ,ml';,,,d,mh,\r e e | hloom over the Yankee Stadium af- In Waterbury Accident toward Nan and studied the pool [misal of the indictment against|™iliation. “Of course I love yourr|nodding her shining hrown Read| ;" " hag Cmatehed victorio| Waterbury, July 15 (UP)—Ten and her word, “Hopes.” “Lookec! | young David Blackhull and new in- | Her nostrils and lips quivered. | 282Inst o b ik Campolo, six feet seven and one- Dersons weie recovering at a hospital half in Argentine puncher. with today after a mishap on th Tt" Hather gets. an L he can tawe|dlctments: against Nina Blackhult| Wh¥ do. iyon think T ‘married [love you, and saw you small mads et e v and Dasselt hefore another weck |Y0U?” Why was he staring at hew|YOU small when she was with you = Kl - S iy . ; Hopes' away from you, Nan, and |and Basselt before another weck SR : Yo" | Arthur DeKuh, big Ttalian, in the |new Middlebury road in which 9% : leave you ‘hopeless’! Hi! That's a | has passed into history. A fine |0 "‘“;"“»’- o incredulously? *Anil 1 M::‘ll ‘Ifi!f}?n:mms\:g‘w L:Tm in. | fcature bout of ten rounds truck carrying five adulis and eight / 4 odel R—-$390 OO. lnstalled o, T 0 e 116 2 loun | Christmas il ipresentiiffor Eyouns [novathatevouive¥made ime say it LG ig. 2 3 e S S eliran i ey NG ke, Father! Get 1t's a pun, ) S0 anav. oh. g0 awast Yoy migne|terrupted, langhing exuitantly. | C e O\\ol \:_np;)lu{; r atter u‘w A\K‘Vl‘\l\l o ru1m:\“\‘l.4lj“ :’~1«'<>m-‘]x‘~’|-<:—q i . Payinents Arranged: " - . o Fii d X S e =% “Don’t you think rEalzcieing GlEVes ORT:OULIINno G ABSRI oIS SUIERE0 Tt F CANEORACEORAEING B : We had it in spelling vesterday—" | this time last year I was maneuve ’“‘;\ ! “)’” b el \,1?‘“ ‘hl{ ,m,“]r'“wl“h_”‘ ‘7,”“ to. | €d out by Monte Munn at Buenos |highway. “Did you also learn that the pun |ing an acquittal as Christmas | _She whirled sharply away fron: | N k : ¢ = Aires but atoned for that defeat by Matthew Dicanti, 45. driver of the L 2 =R 2 »ut the ne: L day' — whether she's satisfied or Y : s the lowest form of wit?’ his|present for Bert Crawford 'Iln‘fqi‘;”]'\' "“‘ iy I‘"”‘]‘q‘”om“‘ her “:” hot? Butdid you really love me | knocking out Roberto Romerti. An- |machine, is Dbelieved to have tost father gihed. “Well, what do you |seems to drag endlessly, and then | P04y as spun ah again, but | Not: B < & et us Snyder, ry-hitting Kansas | control after the front wheel struck ¥ know ‘:hm,. that?" he pretended |all of a sudden you wake up to |tis time not in obedience to her |then? E e oA e beres , vast amazement and triumph. I | realize that it hasn't been dragging |%“ill. but by the strength of h “Won't you leave me a shred of | City prospect, battles Jack Renault, | the soft shoulder beside the con St 2 ¢ pride?” Nan protested, blood | Canadian star, in the semi-finals, | crete roa . . = : AN Lt yin e arms, a strength that for a mo. MY pride a d Al R e i ¢ Lconard . 0 st serior 14? 31 0 heye ysnt il vt o[ mente thea Fenan Mok covanin hes | Dishine Winito v ancsi s BT NI neERRIsE oA s iy IR QR CRIAREU ) Ll oo . rc t. one S “poop Nan! | Fath e His voice trailed to a constrained e Punch” Le; iams, New | IV injured. was reported in a fairty ribs. Not that she felt the pain oh, what does pride matter now? | ONe Punch” Leo Williams, New i I n R ause a pun 15 a play on words. | David, kunh? . . . Let's sce: about lose— ‘hopes’ au from he 5 pause. Nan knew that he wa L JE ToreariaT zoed condition this morning. s‘lnrm”,, ;? “Don't mind, thinking not only of the anniver- I—den't want — your pity!” she |1 loved you from the first day 1 \0.;-::{,”“:,.0,,‘,.,,,\.,,, district aleo will | Motorists found the i Nan. Father's got some little old | sary of the openirg of the Crawford |81sped 2gainst his coat. “Let ma|Wworked for you. I fried to be de-} 7/ m] ‘olate in action. the|in air, with the screaming victims iy g ’ e Sty s0—" cent ensugh to resign, when I found |5¢¢ XKlid Chocalate 'in action, the : Sk three-letter words over there you case, but also of another anniver- |80— . ; i o e o it Cuban featherweight flash meeting | Pinned beneath. Police orde can steal. Look! I betcha you can |sary was hurtling inevitably | “Pity he laughed. in a voice |Out wha ok MANEr WY Ailon Cahen in a ten rounder at | investigation of the accident e hia tlove aith 5 Gt or R’ toward him — the anniversary of ['OUgh with emotion. “Oh, Nan!" |me e Ay the Rockaway Dlayland Stadium < he marveled @ can |his adored first wife's desertion.| Somehow he shifted her so that{ “Wher was that?" he demanded | 1¢ tockaway Dlayia ox ; take h:; ;!1" K\\ly»:;?»: t th zln Was there anv wonder that he had | #er head lay in the crook of his, fagerly as a hoy with his first sweet- s f ];)“ ,\r‘h’\’ o (Hm-l\] ”lhhl Back ‘ald Golf Fjd ce his ith tha s Wa an I ’ 525 man, featherweights, furnich the V Bace 1n he nosiall slons. Puorlmno. thought ‘at all for tha signifis|Uight “arm. Above her, coming|hear AT R N e When Ball Hits Baby Nan! Father takes her ‘hopes’ and | cance of the date, so far as he and | closer and closer, were his black hoswihen willls Todd wantedif o gy stomotrow mighti . || John Taurins) 48’ Tawlor treet. | T takerhis Tova ibefone &he can——tai 51 were concerned? He had not | ¢Ves. liquidly brilliant, wider than | to marry me and was jealous of At I( S enit light. Tornic | Was trying to improve his golf game = indicate by word or glance that |She had ever scen them. It was like | You, and tried 1o make me say 1) At Hoston's Garden tonight. Tirnte | 700 B8 oy SR T i e Th h t Foreasitlion ik, heart | the twelfth of the month meant |Ui¥ing 1o face twin suns. Blinded, [loved him and didn’t love you,” (=c¢haafl and “Jack Gagnon. wivaly o s ©or b Cih his niblick, He ¢ cheapes ien that Nan in her hear : o L e e heavyweights, meet for the right to |’ DSV 4 & s b eaasl e B e serhaps it didn’t— |she closed her own eyes. . . . she answered. ey o T e | would knoek the ball up against a e g0 on like thic! Il go crazy or to him, since the marriage was mot| A thousand times Nan had| “And for three months I've bheen L’“i‘m‘ damvaloneyglaisuinE el it i et el e / MOTOR-LIFE INSUR/ run away. . . . But I can't go on really a marriage, and there was [dreamed of his first kiss, and now |tormented by the suspicion that you ""' Icaneas iy Thirsd oht. | he would knock it against the shed | - like this! Iiven a silly little word | room in his heart for celebration [she learrad w pallid things | loved Willis Todd and married me | o o0 BEESa5 * I Trursday BIERC |, 0y, | ’ you can hlly game stabs me in the heart—' of only one wedding anniversary. dreams can be beside ecstasy | Only because T necded you more | }OUNE Stri '.mf'.| Macon heavy- | "y o vards off, Mrs. Tony Parone P J She played on miechanically, hes | “I'e often wondered about Craw- |of reality. 1f he had released her|than he did.” Morgan confessel. | S<I#ht is matched against George ;. p, )0t street. sat on her porch 2 s sinall face pale and set wids | ford” Morgan went on, his voice [When he lifted his head at last she | “But — about Iris. It had better be | (f”(’ ‘(\,',] “I';‘]B:\"{,' ”\';'"‘(;:"' with her one and one-half months Waverly All- Pennsylvania o v Lblinali to many almost normal again. “You know. [ would have fallen to the floor. Bui | sai all of it, and then we can| ' “ " 3 Lo - |old baby in her arms, enjoying the | B - e L ast Curtis demand. | 1US rather hurt me that he has|he did not release her. Oh, no, no! |talk about us. I did love her, Nan, {,‘0’\"] “f‘o”' “KO'”' h “f‘-“‘l""’”‘ ?\“ evening aic.| Onel of the balis Motor Cil. . .not the cheap ; S i lov r the semi-final on the i i i ed resentfully: “What's the matteg, | never written. After all, T did she- exulted. as he held her head | with the most painful, shameful, | S2%7% 1oF mal o on € hocked by Tauring went high, est oil . . . but it does give At el Nim out of a nasty situation. . . . |against his breast, so that she heard | degrading, - enslaving love that a |(SHIE 06 T .| clearing the shed and struck Mrs q " i el i Py the wav. T %ot into conversation | the decp, quick throbbing of his man ever felt for a woman who | OUer bouts on the natonal sched- |0t ol PHOL MR e Tang the least expensive lubri- A e TR her + new vice presi- | he could not love him. She didn't try [ U7 MCN . breast, leaving ma P . : t National Bank. Was that pity, 2 . At|to pretend that she loved me. As|, ';’"';"" & I>.\‘f“ ‘°"i_‘ Dexter |70 ective MeAvay. in investigating 2 caticn . . . more miles and i TR e R o 5 8 Crawford's BT least,” he |:‘m;vm> |‘;<”\m"( vibrat- | I said 5 \-.)\;1» ""‘n I don't ml,m\“ SR T"‘r”““"l_”'\ ‘;M‘”'y’zy_r {he complaint, which was n\m;]n by | = smoother miles per quart. i e an o e e i 1 hout me defending | ing joyously, “we talk the same her. Rut I used fo pray fo God |\ Petey Mack, Jersey City. ' Tony Parone, brought the ball to| M D S e ot e T : zzZlement charge, | language. For three months I've|in my agony. to wake up the next .’»“_li“‘ ton rounds; at Philadelphia | ,ojiee neadquarters. The child is | thing els rve v - a ught T might be interested |been telling myselt that 1 didn't|morning and find myself free of | JaCk G1oss. Salem. N. J., vs. Murrav | o4 coriously injured. | formit i Know that Crawford had heen|want your pity — that until you |my love Shic Rt et e G S S ; ving in Paris. He saw him there o bve me I' ch | I knew Iri 4 be reli rounds; at Grand Rapids, Joe God- G e St o : € in Faris. He saw him there learned to love me I'd not touch | “I knew Iris would be relioved. [ {OURI% &t Grand Bapids, Joc 800 plainyille Trio Escape alone for T v t somn about onths ago, playing |you — Oh, Nan. my darling, what even if her vanity would have suf-| < v = Nk 7 0 v fodoaih t woman so heautiful |stupid, blind fools we've both been! | fered. T must have bored her and '“q‘_'”“ S fonia ey mounda | When Auto Ov erturns | And before 1 t he talk of the town. Two supposedly intelligent adults, |annoyed her unbearably with my | TU¢ sday — At Chicago, ~Logan| Although their car turned | balf the protests v - UT ks. T suppose,” he sick with love for each other, keep- | passion. It made her despise me | duare. Steve Smith, Bridgeport. | completely over, Rocco Croioze and bling off his clamorous tonzne Na ¥ a grin. ng cach other at a distance.” d hurt me in thousands of little | CONN- VS. Frankie Gareia, feather-|his two children of Plainville were had run into the library and shu = = ys. But T conldn't cure myselr, | ¥ Ci8hts ten rounds; at Los Angeles, [not injured Saturday night when the door. 3 hear 1 1 But a little later she had to de-| My malady was so malignant thai | J20Y Sal Sorio, Philippines, vs. Ed- | the car in which they were riding A L s It was | reelt aainat iy chatse |it reqaied a surseen's Tinife_and | die Mack, lightweights, ten rounds: | crashed into a machine driven by et sneih ) 1c i e Gl i B e U at Cleveland, Gorilla Jones, Akron James B, Parsons, Jr, 105 Lyons SO abneaced Jn oo i ling inn R e L ) Negro, vs. Bucky Lawless, Roches- |street [ fondly upon 1 tediliesaninaators e o, ped Xily, for her whole Mo paused and Nan's heart lunged W{"\lv»\ 8 ‘:"""‘:“"‘“:\:“ ten rounds. | Parsons was driving south on child : e e Noohat | bogy irembling Richenty v WS nellivinefeeaThit P A Ts e i Jag aRBLan bl coln fatrestun e G nloze v esina g “He's ! . ! A flad ¥ badinio| ). Yo logkedlime ontontonriwed | fhctazony aworss fthan ineatniwhic (|3 EERGTIANASN S IoNnny omens iz iwestiont Hartis eet Silha noc| Morgan told h.r. “I't tt ven | suspic the shamefur |4ing night.” he reminded her gent- | that major operation had caused [ >0 fego, welterweights, ten lice officer’s repor. states that both with the champion anagra 1 who haa lv. “T didn't reproach you. How | him? She heldher hreath. rounds; at Alan, Tdaho, Itred T.en.}must have misjudzed their distances by sending him off caeea 3 i | conld 12 honis by au he dinianiledh| Mill= arpial D shicnad & abont her: ;‘”’" ’\" “\“’\'f" vs. Maxie Rosen- |Slight damage was done. ¢ after eight. He's 10 tes : had not T A e e ’\nrmn.v ')‘i rul.i hfvm heavyweight | S S s | o ¢ 2 W e wanted o be a mother 1o the hoy. | with such infinite tenderness that | {27 rounds, and Demon Kunvon.| Fajr Building Burns; | e ilhaving: won s - f % of All that day 1 had felt like an tears sprang into the girl's cyes. oY Al T Loss i 5 | [ ] straight * ( o exiled king about to he led into a | “I had a marvelous nurse after the ‘\)"”‘_' ‘\\"“_‘ T “(‘ H"“”‘”““ JLE :\0 \\v,,?,?,,t,l,mé.“ ]',d [%(]0;0010 “I'm goin tionary ) et p-| new kingdom — and then—I was |operation,” he pursued the meta- | CW FOuRds: at Holywood, Harold | EW OSSR e Co TUIY 1D | . it to bed with | threatened pped desk, |banished again. T blamed only my- | phor whimsically. “It was her de- || ;'l‘n’ “;h’“']"]"'i‘"‘ I ’."'\‘"‘""”:"‘ Nic iR pRe “:“\"‘ ]’”“" m:“‘l—l‘f’h\l\}\LU\ SQUARE FILLING STATIO ely ouilé er of them n i self, no w1 el Saee § s »ado, nines, cights, ter days destroyed the main | n__ maam , A kb e e IRl e : SE ke e Gare. hich made the opera. | D202 Ve tve davs destroyed the man |5 g AST MAIN CORNER STANLEY STREET Posudnat st s hesngery 3 1 en pre- o ine bt =t i A than the sur night with a loss of £300,000. Spon- | 3—WEST MAIN AT CORBIN AVENUE ght, Cu our vl . e me. JMamed vou no more And as most pa- {atiaous corbustion. wag, held ze. go up with you fonigl eitently, L than 1 blamed —Iris \ fell in love with my sponsible e PG Al n and. on Nan: The won- | [Qst [Vurses Use e D iazat s e e o e . Going ove v ‘ is lips ? L to be free of the mal- last 45 hours fo nearly $2.000,000 Nanodt e A, = gz A e L R New Face Powder m rinis or i Westminiier ' oint ‘] i1 ~v 1 3 LR ,\.h“ L i per Co., and the Triangle Chemics points I'd 3 f 2 t i whispered ometim such MELLO-GLO, the new wondertul | Co.. were destroved Saturday by fire along, champ ’ T I i \ 1 | : Vol Mot e 1 SieBrreds by knuvass: boonliss o lis | 5501060 5 For Every Purpose but might T r 1 vo ¢ < rd ai o bending his head Kiss | purity, and they say it does not p e already kissed 4 ' t ed |1 s heloved AR “Of course, if you w make the skin dry and drawn, Stays The new air service connecting 2 ADKINS When they had g ahou ! i summonecd T 3 vourself You .| on longer, ke hine away, and is| Panama. Nicaragua, Hondures, Brit- chummily b 1 T 'hey must speak of Tris now 1 e whole thing nas so|very beneficial to the complexion. | ish Henduras and Cuba is said to be | ¢ stared for long r name would forever stand i physicai. I never loved | You will looe MELLO-GLO Facc | a success. and will extend to Trini- | ? 2 B of papers on fesk, jer great barrier between them, “I thought Ir o eraonlie . T don't Posden: ediand San Uinn 66 CHURCH STREET | )

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