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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1932)
MEDFOItD TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, 3IOXDAT, JUNE 6, 1932. PAGE SIX V You Can't Marry TAILSPIN TOMMY Skeeter Senses Trouble Uj OLKN.N CHAFF and UAL FORBKSI Mr SYNOPSIS! Caught Jenny .ievell thinks, when she sees Oarth Aveney approaching. She doesn't want to bs discovered, he eauee the is going to a wedding that mutt be kept eecret. tier aousin Qeorgie is marrying Ki die Townsend and it thin is made SubliOt her employer Oration hatching, will lire her. einoe he will have only unmarried women working tor him. When Aveney met the girls, the previous eve ning, Jenny realises he event mnet ot the time with Oeorgie. He wae really trying to bribe Oeorgie by order of Hatching hit uncle to eee whether ehe might be the eource ot eeaavina information about business. Hut Jenny doee not know thie. and believes he ie interested in Oeorgie. She likee him herself and wishes he pre terred her. as (leorgls is already in love. Aveney" t success in prov ing Osorgie's Itinoretira leaves htm free to develop Jenny's acquaint ance. vttitch he seems eager to do. Chapter t RUNNING AWAY rIERB was no time to bide. Jenny bent down to tbe tabby eat and talked to It urgently. Tbe brim of her hat applegreen like her (rock should surely bide ber (ace. Her ears were ailed with tbe sound o( bis footsteps, coming eloser and closer; level with ber, passing, checking. . . , Turning to wards aer. ... She straightened and looked up at him. He really was laughing at ber . . Well, be teas disappointed, nai urally. Georgia, however good-natured she had been, must have turned blra down without a gleam ot compromise. Jenny tilted ber troubled gaze to his and tried to comfort him by dragging tbls odd conversation round to Georgia. "It was a great pity," she said timidly, "that Mr. Matching sent (or Oeorgie last night. Quite often tor weeks and weeks he doesn't need ber of an evening: It was too bad that It happened to break np the party." "1 don't think tbe party mattered a bit. I bad to have halt an hour with Miss ftevell, somewhere, some bow, and 1 got a tar better chance at It In the car than 1 should bav at that Infernal Crescendo place. . . . I wonder I suppose she told yon about our argument?" "She said she would one dsy. As a matter of fact 1 couldn't help over bearing bits ot of the end ot It. ) was In tbe apartment, you see." "I see." He didn't appear embar rassed. He took off bis bat, ran band over bis balr, and sat bare beaded. "Oh, well, you know all about everything, then. . . She's pretty flue, your cousin. Isn't she?" "Nobody except me," returned Jenny proudly, "really knows how One she Is." "You're fond of ber?" He spoki There was no time to hide. Jenny bent down. sow. At least, he seemed to be, thtugh not with his lips or bis eyes. "Good morning, Jeuny Revell." She was helplessly silent. He sat down beside ber and she noticed that there was a good deal of color In his (ace. She (eared It was there because ber. manner was offending dim; and, (or tbe moment, Qeorgie was forgotten. r "I didn't think you would recog site me," she said childishly. "Didn't yon want me tot Was that why you were hldlug behind that big hat? As a matter of (act," he went on. "1 recognised your bands. . . . Does that surprise you?" She was again tongue-tied. She looked down at her hands aa though they oould help ber. Qeorgie bad once remarked that tbey were very beautiful, but that could hardly be tbe reason tor yet she wore no rings, nothing to distinguish them. "Why," said Garth Aveney, one hand on his hip, one elbow crooked over tbe back of the seat, "do you always run away from my very sim ple questions?" "They're not simple," returned Jenny (rom the depths of ber per plezltles. "1 mean they may be easy for you to ask; but they're horribly sard to answer." "Perhaps they are," he agreed un expectedly. He, too, dangled a band for the tabby cat to sidle against. "Let's exchange what Is known aa mall talk Instead. You remark that you wonder what I'm doing In this part of tbe world. Then I make tbe ame kind of noise at you. Tbe only thing really worth talking about Is, of course, the stupendous coinci dence of our meeting lust here, just now. But" Hastily, Jenny said "I'm Oiling In time till twelve o'clock. Then I have to meet Georgia, "And I," said Aveney politely, "am on my way from taking a pi lot's report on his trip to the office. If you honestly don't want to talk about the strangeness of our meet ing you and I In this quiet little pool ot a place we shall now have to think of some more small talk. Fortunately (or me. It's your turn." Involuntarily, she looked at him. There was in bis last words no laughter-echo. His voice sounded abruntly tired: hurt Disappointed. almost absently, his eyes on Jenny's bands, curled round ber knee. . . . "She saved me (rom I don't really know what I should have done It Oeorgie hadn't saved me. You see" She stopped, searching tor words that should do Justice to Georgia. "No, don't stop. Tell me." "Well, I'm afraid 1 shall have to begin with my own history and lt'a rather a dull one." "Tell me, Jenny Revell." "My grandfather waa a rather strange old man. Ha was an eccen tric, and a crank. Kind. In a way at least, he was often kind to me. He bad two children, my father and Georgia's mother. My father was an artist,' my mother was a dancer. Tbey were darlings but tbey never succeeded at anything, either ot them. They died when 1 waa twelve and 1 went to live with grandfather. In tbe country. He told me that Georgle's parents had prac tically kept mine (or years at a time." "Old brute!" "He used to put things rather brutally aometlmes but I think In this case he wanted an excuse to quarrel wltb Georgle's father. Any way, Just before he died be told me he was leaving all he possessed to charity and that as Georgle's par ents seemed to have so much money to throw about, no doubt they would look atter me. And I'm sura they would have helped me, but when grandfather's lawyers made en quiries, they (ound that they were both doad and Qeorgie was quite 'on her own'. So, of course, 1 couldn't bother her. . . . What did you ssy?" "Nothing very much. . . . Tell ma what you did Inatoad of bothering Georgia. "I got a lob aa governess and lost It. The children were dears but their parents were difficult. The the father was 1 bated him. . , . Oh, I can't give you a Hat ot all the Jobs I took and lost. It would bore youl I'm Incompetent, really, and quite untrained. Anyway, I'd got to tbe point ot planning I'd got to tbe very end of everything. And then Georgle found me." (CopvrlgAt. Julia Clelt-Addams) Inataad of watching s qul.t wd dtna day. In th. nxt Installment, Jenny eeee blood. POBTLANT. Ore.. June (API H. Laurence Reynolds, head of the Reynolds Finance company, and Wynter R, Patteraon, teller at the Cltleena National bank, are under ar rest on a warrant laaurd by United BUtea Commissioner Kenneth P. Pra iwr, charging them with conspiracy to violate the nation-1 banking code by embEllnr funde on drpoalt at the Cltlnna National bank. KKTCHIKAN,Aialta June . (API The price of Red King salmon dropped to three oe,,U a pound, the loweat ever known to have been paid bare, on the Ketchikan flab exchange today. White King still sold (or one cent pound, Itmjtwtt rmvrs HAV AMIVSD V AHtCA MW TH fWDfVM OASIOfVO. HADA 7MA-A0L, TKltSTCD CflStAKV Of 7H IMA RAJAH OfOUOME, SIS MSO tDAlE 7T Atte&c oh wf rAi er the yaw sxar&?. KVSCD AfC0fpiCS OF TfJ CKOOArS, HAVC KCtVD AH OAfMSlS A)?f F0 Wf 7WVS AND AK VVfIS If XT Wf'K ASAAf B PXAkM INTO 7 0&&V7AL TM51. 1 BEEN WAIHN ON E436 EVER eiNCE I HEARD THAT HINDU U3A.1 IN NEW YORK ' Ik'l'M NT oXJRCYINS A80UT HIM. I BtoyglggAY.TOM.THE "V-" " ' -Stol l WANT YbU BOYS TO HOP VvC DIOn'7 I I I : - I DON'T THIN HE'LL BOTHER S aBESSSjJ CHIEF JUfcT MpSf I'LL SET R3UR. t BFF FOR NEW VtSRK, ft hf,TEi.i. f DESPERATE FOR MONEY ES?l?mH6 WANTS TO THS'THIRTY-TWO CENTS At SICK AND NOULL HAVE Vi. Sg Vi;33,-r-Y3 S'M ATTER POP Well, Well, Is That How It Happens? w. v -ftew Co Me. Tres.ic ro r- -rji KIO -MAltC. OK Tc(T Of -HIS HeAT By C. M. PAYNE 1 BOUND TO WIN Telling Jonathan 03 By EDWIN ALGER ZH I 1 I HONOR BRIGHT 1 HE CALLEoWH fSSi TO THANK fSg?y tS2E BHftNWN WENT INTO &WfiF- w.V for. telSiifef bg reer'T-M: breakfast, and he told wmwKS WiA TPPINft WSi, 6O ONI Mmi ME EVEP.YTHIN& 1 TOLO M!&K Ssjffly U& OPFTO FlV'Wiw. y mir- BRANKN--BIS FEET'TOLD KftWiS? JONATHAN-- ELaiEn PROVED THAT BY THE VMAY J lift 1 - ACTEDl ' l ' YES ST ! NO OOISBT ABOUT T BE1N' "THE TRUTH 1 Et-X BRAHK1N LIT OUT O' HERt l-K& H& Wftt, IK) A MESo O' POISON IVY I S06H.BEN, IP 'C- TAKEN A WALKWlTHTHAT FELLOW 1 MIGHT NEVER. HAVF GOTTEN BACK HtHt LOWUlfc , M I GLAD VJE MET B6 reel 1 mM& HERS.WAITER LEMME KNOW THE! BiD SO I CAN VAY 70U AND 6ET OUT O' HtKt fBS FEEYS'W WAITING JSiiKS OUT6IDE5 j mis a. Jry THE NEBBS The Family Tree By SOL HESS JttK IS THE. ShCTVI 0W OF THE TRIL OP THE PEOPLE VS. ARTHUR EBODA AMD VWESTIUL FIMD ADAMS OKI THESTAKID poaECirth6 Arry. examaVag : Q: TELL ME HOVJ VUECE THE BURSLAOS OBESSED OKI THE KlkSHT OF THE EOSBeRVr A. THEY HAD OKI MASK5 A KID HAD THEIR COATS TURKJED IK1SIDE OUT. Q: 19 THERE AKrVTHIKlS THAT WOULD LEAD YOU TO BELIEVE THAT THE DEFEKJOAKIT fy-VAS OKIE OF THE ROBBER5 ? ' ATTY. ADAMS FOR DEFEW5E . i OBOECT.YOUIS lHOK10Fi1HES KOTHERFc-pOO '8EUEVE-HES 5uaTrAIMD. ffl ' t 1 ATTY. HALL ADAMS CROSS OueSnOKIIMS.- OUDGE KIIBLICK , THIS 15 A Q . SO SOOC NAME IS ADAMS, TOO ? . CASE OF THE PEOPLE VERSUS T Al NES,StRl IT'S BEEKI SO FEB MISH ARTHUR EBODA AMD VJECE HERE k-1 OKI TO 60 VEAR. TO TRY -IT MOT TO ESTABLISH QINOO'&E MO RELATIOM OF MIME? FAMILV TREES. -f A: COULDKii- SAV POSITIVE ABOUT i5lr I THAT,YOUKJ& MAK1 MY FOLKS CAME JH J?.- rrnrrrlnnPri rsmnrrfiii I "i l from dovajm MississLPP way-- JlJ& tgiJ C Continued, iomorrovj . j rJfTTvuHEREO your Jfolks miiL n SPRING FCOM ? v asKs I infers- ia Kfe h I ti. I 7... . E M II II I II I 1 t I I JB,Z . T.Jr'e-fW3'l fTifhf, 19JJ, br Tbt BU tnOUitm. Inct Trsxtai wVrfc R. U.I Ph niK,. d f.SSrl 1 l - F- i Hys MUTT AND JEFF And Both Were Vulnerable By BUD FISHER - s , v- . : ZfAinT, do You knouji soe: I vweLL.HeRe's A ) j, J . . a clevjer fimesseM THcre's A GRAN TTi ANYTHING ABooT I "HY? I LITTLE 'aLArA'. t . ifj T. "'"q x VV 1 ,loM tY PART XlT I SLAM'- 1&i Dumk CONTRACT HbM fSr J L C Hft.O V ' Y ' - S . . JT- r ' BRINGING UP FATHER By George McManus PORTLAND, Or.. Junn (AP) Endorsement of th lBth mndmnt to the comtltutton of the United StfttM ftnrt oppoaitton to ny can rtldftte for public office who Uvor repent of the Amendment were voic ed In rraolvittons adopted tdny by the Ore Ron conference of the Krtte UciO church, In nnnuel convention here. By resolution nlo the conference favored wholeeome amueements for recrentlon, but left the Interpretation of "wholesome" to the Individual. Phone 442 We-M haul away your refuee. City Sanitary Serrloe, Picture frame mde to order. PeMleja, opp. UoU UitAief, I eildU LKsr fl LHj I rSrSS? Ill M& Lr J II ill iSSsssT