S outhern Oregon News Review. Thursday, March 13, 1947
S E W IN G C IR C LE PATTERNS
UNFAIR TO UORSI»
LAST LOVEI1
X*
BY
“Why are you going to quit.
Bill* Are your wages too low?
“The wages are all right, but
I'm keeping a horse out of a job.”
Engine Captured Cow
A ease was being heard in court
in which a farm er was claiming
indemnity for a cow killed by a
railway train. Counsel for the
defense put many tedious and
superfluous questions.
“Was the cow on the track ?”
he asked the engineer.
The engineer had had about
enough. He replied:
“No, of course not. She was
in a field half a mile away. But
when it saw her, the engine left
the rails, jumped the fence, and
chased her across the field and up
a tree. There it strangled her to
death.”
.tlore Self-Restraint
Two angry candiuates of oppos
ing political beliefs rushed a t each
other. Friends stepped in to sepa
rate them. Each struggled to get
a t the other. The first, seeing the
extremely violent efforts of the
nther exclaimed, “More of you
men hold Jones! One man can
hold m e.”
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rU. S- S a vin q A . <ßond&.
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GrandReffet
r« O M SNIFFLY, STUFFY DISTRESS OF
HeadCotós!
J ill M c F a rla n e , who«» l.ilh e r, R ich
ard. disappeared In W orld W a r I. (alia
in love w ith Lieut. Spang Cordon, lie
le l li her that her brother. Rle, I t see
ing a divorcee and she is upset to And
■he w om an in question. Sandra C alv ert,
Is an older, hardened wom an
Spang
savs good bye and la te r, while riding
w ith H ave Patterson, a fa m ily friend,
she is throw n from her horse and taken
to the hospital.
Th at night R ich ard
returns home.
He tells her m other,
Ju lia, that he assumed a new nam e,
that of C aptain M a rk e y , and Is sta
tioned a t the same r a m p as R lr. Ju lli
is h e a rts tlrk that he never acknowledged
h ii children and Is determ ined Io keep
them fro m knowing the tru th .
CHAPTER
"W h a t do you w ant me to say,
J i l l ' I'v e told you that there's noth
ing w rong between Dave and me.
I'm s o rry i f I look w orried, but I'm
try in g to run a fa rm under p re tty
serious d iffic u ltie s , I have a son
gone o ff to w ar, and I'm not as
young as you a re .”
J ill sighed. “ Y o u 're ce rta in ly a
d e v ilis h ly stubborn fem ale, Dooley
M c F a rla n e ." Then she raised her
head suddenly, and her eyes w id
ened and blackened w ith panic.
“ Dooley, is it Ric? Has som ething
happened?”
"W h a t could happen? I haven't
even had a le tte r fro m R ic. What
m ade you say that, J ill? " she
asked, her voice sharpening a little .
"W e ll, know ing R ic's capacity fo r
g e ttin g h im s e lf in to ja m s and your
ca p a c ity fo r suffering about them,
it was a logical question, wasn't
cJLovafij S p e c u l i
There was a personal h u m ilia
tion fo r John 1. M cF a rla n e In the
situation, a sense of re sp o n sib ility
that showed in his haunted eyes and
uncertain gestures. He had flared
at her once, try in g to ease his
own to rm e n t, she knew.
“ I f you had le t me go ahead as
I wanted to. yo u 'd be in a decent
position n o w ," he had snapped.
"Y o u 'd have the advantage '*
" B u t R ichard is n 't dead.“ Ju lia
rem inded h im .
"R ic h a rd is s till
R ichard, he’s s till your son, he's
s till m y husband, even i f fo r years
he has been liv in g a lie .”
“ I have no s o n !” he cried, his
th ro a t w o rkin g .
“ I never had a
son! I spawned a cre a tu re — some
th in g w ith no honor, no manhood.
I owe the w o rld an apology fo r th a t
mischance. But I w ill not d ig n ify
R ichard M cF a rla n e by ow ning h im
as m y son. He has th ro w n aw ay
his name, he th re w aw ay his w ife
and ch ild re n , he can th ro w his fa
ther away, to o !”
He had m arched out w ith his back
stiff, and J u lia had resisted the im -
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M U
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O'Sullivan
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No. 1
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Tough and Springy
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M e m o rie s!
Ju lia caught herself
before she laughed aloud. M em o
ries th a t burned and shamed.
“ I had m y c h ild re n ,” she con
tro lle d her voice, “ but there were
tim es before your g ra n d fa th e r came
and got us when I d id n ’t know w hat
you w ere going to eat.
I was
younger than you, I had always
been taken care of. I h a d n 't even
any com m on sense.
There are
compensations, J ill.
P ersonally, I
th in k yo u r Spang an e x tra o rd in a rily
wise and decent young man.
He
was ta kin g care of you. N ot m any
men have the strength and fo re sig h t
to do th a t when they fa ll in love ”
“ B u t— I don’ t even know th a t he
did fa ll in love, Dooley!
you
th in k he's being noble. I ' l l tr y to
th in k that, too.
B ut listen, we
needn't have tw o lorn women in
one house. You go ahead and m a r-
ry D a v e ."
Ju lia started a little . Then she
said, “ Dave hasn’t asked me.
It
would be m ore m aidenly to w a it
u n til he did, d o n 't you think? I ’ m
going now, d a rlin g .
Y o u r g ra n d
fa th e r and I are s till try in g to run
a fa rm .”
She had to te ll Dave. T hat thought
was heavy on her m ind and he a rt
as she drove the station-wagon
through the town.
Dave did not
know, as yet, th a t R ichard M c F a r
lane had come back.
S haring the w eight of this new
problem w ith him would be a re lie f,
though not kin d to Dave. She could
not ta lk to R ich a rd 's father. The
old man had w ith d ra w n in to a sav
age mood o f gloom, and her a t
tem pts to d ra w h im out o f it had
only irrita te d h im ; she could not
h u rt him any m ore
Il
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"1 do n 't th in k he expects it. H« I
d id n 't ta lk about it. He was very i
casual You know R ichard, th a t in i '
pervious, a rro g a n t way he had? H r
hasn't changed.”
“ He came expecting you to swoon
w ith d e lig h t at seeing h im , nc i
doubt, and when you w e re n 't o v e r.'
come he kept a rem ote and s lig h tly ■
condescending
attitude.
Yes.
I'
| know.”
" I don't know w hat he expected
He cunie in as coolly ns though he'd
only been gone a week. He asked
about the children. I was so thunk- j
fu l n e ith e r of them was there. John'
I. was in a rage He w o u ld n 't even I
shake hands w ith R ichard. I'm so
so rry fo r John I. I ache a ll o v e r."
“ C hin up. Dooley. This puts an
end to a ll the u n c e rta in ty —at least (
a ll the unease th a t has been m a k
ing you unhappy so lo n g ."
“ I wish I could see the end.” she
said.
S p e c ia l O c c a s io n Hlou.se->
“ Dooley, you’ re not going to!
blam e yo u rs e lf fo r this m an's
worthlessness, his u tte r lack of d e -!
cency or h o n o r!"
“ I have to blam e m yself, Dave.
A nother wom an m ig h t have m ade!
a man o f R ichard, m ig h t have made
him w ant to be a man. at least.
" L o g ic a l enough.
But why the
pa n icky attack?
Do you know
som ething about R ic that 1 d o n 't
know ?”
“ N o.” J ill kept her eyes on the
ce ilin g . " I told you—I only saw him
fo r a few minutes. He had some
kin d of d u ty .”
She could not add the blonde Mrs.
C a lv e rt to D ooley’s m ental burden
now. When R ic was shipped out
fro m R id le y F ield that would all
end, anyw ay.
"D o o le y, i f you sent Spang a
reg iste re d le tte r te llin g him about
me. it w ould be forw arded, w o u ld n 't
John I. Denounces
His Son
"W e ll, that let» you out, Dooley. Hr
ca n 't expect to be taken back, a fte i I
th is ."
She shook her head. "H e shamed
me. Dave. I know that I was young J
and s illy . I suppose I bored h im !
a fte r the firs t e xcitem ent o f being
in love w ith me cooled into co m m o n -!
place re sp o n sib ility, into the d re a ry
chore o f having to clothe and feed (
me, having the babies co m in g —all
th a t."
it?”
" I don’ t know m uch about a rm y
routine, J ill. Y o u 'll hear fro m h im ,
w o n 't you, when he has a definite
address?”
" I d o n 't know. He m ig h t be where
he couldn’ t w rite , m aybe fo r weeks
—m ig h t be fo r months. D ooley—he
kissed m e good - b y !”
Tears
squeezed between J ill's guarded
eyelids.
" T h a t m akes you one of the great
com pany o f women who w ait, then.
And y o u r jo b is to w a it p a tie n tly,
and not w o rry Spang w ith a broken
a rm th a t w ill be healed before he
hears about it.”
“ The tro u b le is, I don’ t know
w h a t I'm w a itin g fo r .”
"Y o u a ren’ t engaged to yo u r lieu
tenant, then?”
No— he ju s t kissed me and said
to keep th a t t i l l he cam e back. And,
Dooley— som etim es they d o n 't come
back! F a th e r d id n 't come b a c k !”
She did not see the quick, drained
spasm th a t changed her m o th e r’ s
face in to a hollow m ask of to rm e n t.
“ T h a t's p a rt of it. J ill.
T h a t’ s
w hat I w anted to spare you. i f I
could.”
“ I t w asn’t yo u r fa u lt th a t I fe ll,
head over heels. I did it w ith m y
eyes open. And I ’m w illin g to pay.
I w o n 't welsh, no m a tte r w hat life
hands me. I ’ m a M cF a rla n e , lik e
you.
B ut—not to have a n yth in g !
You had m em ories—you had R ic
and me. I have n o th in g !”
/ //f
“ B ut it's p e rfe ctly c le a r,” he ar- -
gued.
Then sharply. “ You d o n 't!
mean th a t you w ant h im back— j
now ?"
J u n io r F ro c k
s m a r t, b rie f-s le e v e d fr o c k
has young ideas—tiny waist,
¡full
skirt and the popular surplice
"R ic h a rd M cF a rla n e had every
ch an ce.
He threw his chances tIosinK' Junior sewers can put it
away. He deserves no sym pathy together easily and quickly. Use
I w on't let you h u rro w yo u rse lf lik e «ay solid tones or stripes, going
th is ,"
j this way and that.
She gave a little choking sigh. “ I I
suppose I should tr y to act lik e an I
• • •
N<! ,B!W’ com”
■lzc\ 11 •., *-
outraged w ife. I erhaps I can when or 39-lnch; 2?» yard s straig h t m ain fabric.
I ’ ve got o ve r being stunned.”
j _______________ _
it?”
In sta n tly relief fro m head cold dis
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Follow directions in package.
S lo r l-o S fe w e e l /J o u th fu f ^Jrocb
“ D ave,
R ichard is alive.
pulse to fo llo w and c o m fo rt him .
T his was som ething they m ust each
bear alone. She w ith her h a rrie d
anxieties and m o rtific a tio n , and this
proud, s tric k e n old m an w ith his
b itte r m em ories.
She w ould ta lk to Dave now, she
decided. He was s ittin g in his little
cuddy in the bank, when she went
in, the niche where he m et fa rm e rs
and handled crop Ioans and m o rt
gages. He looked up at her w ith a
tw in k lin g sm ile and sprang q u ick
ly to his feet, to p u ll out a ch a ir
fo r her.
“ S it down, Dooley. How’ s J ill? ”
“ She’s qu ite unhappy, but that
w ill pass. The a rm is healing nice
ly. A re you busy, Dave? W ill you
be free soon?”
“ I ’ m fre e now i f you need me.
Something wrong. D ooley?”
“ I w ant to ta lk to you. Could we
go out and s it in m y c a r? ”
Dave
reached
fo r
his
hat,
slam m ed a d ra w e r shut.
“ Come a long,” he said.
J u lia started the station-wagon
when D ave had clim bed up beside
her.
“ It 's too hot to s it s till. I ’ll find
a shady place. O r I 'l l keep d riv
in g .”
“ F in d a shady place. D o n 't wear
out y o u r tire s .”
Dave asked no questions. He did
not h u rry her. T hat h u rt, too, his
sensitive
understanding
of her
mood.
Dave Is Told
About Richard
“ The next m o ve ," Dave said in a '
calm, business-like tone, " is fo r you J
to get a d iv o rc e .”
She shivered a little . “ T h a t’ s ju s t j
it, Dave. I c a n 't do it.”
“ W hat do you mean, you can't? [
I f tw enty-five years of callous deser
tion is n 't legal grounds fo r divorce.
i f a s|,in g le s ta in has been e x-
I don t know w hat w ould b e ."
posed to th e w e a th e r fo r th re e o r
“ Of course I have g ro u n d s," she fo u r y e a rs i t c a n be s a fe ly p a in t-
agreed. “ but R ich a rd is n 't R ich a rd ed.
E a r lie r th a n th a t, th e re is
now. He's C aptain Roger M ackey a ch a n ce i t w ill b e co m e d is c o lo re d ,
o f the a ir corps.
T h in k w h a t i t '
__ » __
would m ean!
A nation-w ide sen
, , th e c o lla r o f a m a lV s s h ir t is
sation. A m ilita r y in ve stig a tio n . A b a d l w
c u t H ()fT w h h a f a .
cheap sto ry to spread in black head- 2or b la d e a n d use R fo r a
tte rn
nes in the cheap press. H u m illa - in c u t t in g . a n ew c o lla r fro rn th e
*°"
a
»
RJ C|h?,rd^ °'d ‘ail
the shirt,
fa th e r. And fo r R ic and J ill— Dave.
__ e
I d o n 't even dare to th in k of w h a t!
u _, __
,,
a
a
.
r,
.
» a s h nylons ■ after every wear-
l t w ould do to R ic and J ill
•
•
; in g , sin ce p e r s p ira tio n is d e tr im e n -
They aren t ch ild re n , Dooley. | f a j t 0 (he d e lic a te fib e rs . I t ’ s a
They re adults and strong enough good id e a to w a s h n e w n y lo n s be-
to bear the tru th ."
| fore y0U wear them.
A Struggle of
Torn Emotions
£ ut worn OU( bath towels into
re c ta n g le s to p u t u n d e r ta b le p la c e
"E v e n If they are s tro n g -a n d R ic ™
! \ The
P ro te c ts th e
is n 't strong. Dave. I ’ m his mother, I ta b le fr o m h o t d ls h e s w h lc h m a y
but I ’ m not fo o lish ly b lin d . I know m ar the surface, especially if the
th a t R ic has a weak s tra in in h im . m at used is of a thin m aterial.
B u t even agreeing th a t they are
After washing your powder puff,
m a tu re enough to 'fa ce a g hastly s it
uation lik e this, th in k of the c ru e lty pin it to the sunny side of your
curtain and let the
air
of i t
I ’d be de stro yin g the one window
.
.
fine th in g I'v e been able to give speed lts d r y ln 8- W hen d « c o m
them .
I gave them a hero fo r a pletely dry, raise the nap with a
fa th e r—a dead hero— and I ca n 't stiff brush.
snatch th a t fa th e r aw ay and show I
*
them a cow ard instead! I t w ould . F o r re m o v in g r u s t fr o m s te e l o r
do in ca lcu la b le h arm . To R ic espe- ^ro n > a c o m b in a tio n o f s te e l w o o l
d a ily . C a n 't you see w hat it | a n d k e ro s e n e is good, a lth o u g h con-
w ould do to Ric, when he’ s so un- s id e ra b le e lb o w g re a s e c e r ta in ly
balanced anyw ay by the unbalanced w *d be n e ce ssa r y .
recklessness now in the w
o r l d ? ------------------------------
is h “.-.5';,.*;:1 “« t s u s
me, undoubtedly.
D ave.”
I
can’ t
do
it,
3(M n S b
A sergeant, stationed in G er
m any, was given a pass to visit
“ W hy should yo u r son despise
P aris. He was very excited about
you? You aren’ t ta lk in g sense.”
visiting the famous City of Light,
“ Because his fa th e r despised me but he was m ost anxious to see
—enough to abandon me. I'd be a the Mona Lisa in the Louvre.
p a th e tic fig u re in m y c h ild re n ’ s
When he returned to Germany
eyes. I ’d be p itie d by people who one of his friends asked him if he
have respected me. I can’ t do it. had seen the famous painting.
I can’t . ”
“ Yes,” he said, with little en
D ave leaned fo rw a rd , his face thusiasm .
g ra y and grave and w eary.
“ A ll
“ You don’t sound very enthusi
rig h t, Dooley.
I f th a t's the way astic about it,” replied his friend.
you feel, th e re ’ s nothing I can say.”
“ Well,” said the sergeant, list-
“ B u t— how else can I feel?” Ju lia lessly, “ I ’ve heard hundreds of sto-
heard a voice that broke and cried, j ries about her ‘enigm atic sm ile,’
and was a little startled to dis -I so you can imagine how disap-
cover that it was her own. "I'm pointed I w as to find that she re
trapped. There's no way out for minds me of Aunt Bessie asking
me. You can see that, surely?”
me to please pass the salt.”
“ Dave. R ich a rd is a liv e ."
There was a sharp silence, so in
tense th a t J u lia 's skin began to
p ric k le . Then Dave said, hoarse
ly, "H o w do you know ?”
" I ’ ve seen h im .”
She kept her
eyes s tra ig h t ahead. "H e came to
the house Sunday n ig h t.”
“ H e’s in the a r m y ." Ju lia went
on. "H e ’ s a captain in the a ir corps.
He’ s a t the same field where R ic
is ."
“ So—a ll this tim e —”
“ A ll th is tim e ,” she repeated fla t
“ I don’ t know w hether I see i t o r
ly , "h e had stayed aw ay because he
not, Dooley. I see you, bent on sac
d id n ’ t w ant to come b a c k !”
“ The h o u n d !”
Dave snapped. rific in g yo u rse lf s till fu rth e r to this
“ And 1 suppose now—when yo u 're dream you've harbored a ll these
on yo u r feet, when things would be years. T e ll m e one thing. A re youj
easy fo r h im —he has changed his s till in love w ith R ichard M c F a r
lane?”
m in d ? ”
She set her face, stille d its q u iv
"H e sa id .” J u lia gave a hard lit
tle laugh, “ th a t he realized sudden ering.
ly th a t he missed m e !”
“ No, I ’ m not in love w ith h im any
“ V e ry suddenly—a fte r tw enty-five m ore. I th in k th a t died long ago.
ye a rs!
D id he have any excuse_ I know now th a t it died. N ot even
any e xp la na tio n ? ”
a spark cam e a live when I saw him .
"H e d id n ’ t o ffe r any excuse. It I had only had one fe e lin g —an out
seems he got bored w ith the w a r raged and te r rib ly h u rt indignation.
and wandered off to P aris. In the He m ade m e cheap in m y own
confusion a fte r the a rm is tic e he got eyes, Dave, and th a t can be a hor- j
hold of some other m an’ s papers. rib le feeling. I was som ething that
had been th ro w n a w a y.”
So he changed his nam e.”
‘D ave d ie w a relieved breath.
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P O Be sure you get America’s favorite rice cereal,
I . O . the on» and only Kellogg’» Rice Krlsplesi