Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 09, 1933, Page 6, Image 6

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3JEDF0RD MATE TRIBUNE, BEDFORD, OREGON, SUND3LT, JULY 9, 1933.
By the World FORGOT
A Utv Serial hy Ruby M. A vres
BYNOP'iat The tact that eht
hae met the light-minded Bernie
Boyd in the bio London hoUl
uhere ehe it etaying with her
mother and etep-father makee
Oeorgte Bancroft think ell the
more of Bernie'e husband Nicho
las ror before Sicholae left tor
Germany and an operation that
may cvre the ecarred lace that
hne ended hie career ae a movie
etar, he let Qeoraio knote that he
caree tor her. Qeorple obtaine tor
Velty Foeter a fob ae maid to
Bernie; ehe aleo hae teamed
h'irhnjae' addreee in Germany, and
iite down to write him a letter.
Chapter 11
LOVE LETTER
GEORGIA had narer written a
Iotb letter In her lite, and aha
did not know that sba was writing
one now aa aha carefully dipped her
pen in the Ink and began her letter
to Nlcholaa Boyd with the Terr cir
cumspect worda "Dear Mr. Boyd.'
Perhaps he would understand that
In her heart she was really saying
"Darling Nicholas," aha thought
hopefully as aha held her charming
bead a little on one side and stared
down at tbe words.
"Never show your true feelings to
a man," Erelyn bad aald. "And it
you want to be happy, never lore a
man as well as ha lores you."
Georgle sighed and went on with
her task.
"1 thought perhaps you would
writ to nis. As you haven't, J
rn writing a little note to lay that
1 hope you are quite well. Aire.
Boyd Is staying In this bote!, and
1 think aha la beautiful. She was
very nice to me, too, when Evelyn
Introduced us. They came over on
the eame ship, you know. I did not
tell her I knew you as 1 waa not
sure If you would like me to,
"Germany seems a long way off.
and If you feel a little lonely, per
hapa this letter will cheer you up.
I think r.bout you a .Treat deal, and
wonder how you are. 1 suppose
1 am having a good time. 1 go
about a grout deal to dinners, and
lunch parties, and theaters; 1
haven't been to the plcturea at all
since you went away.
"I've got lots of new frocka and
I am much better looking than 1
need to he, though Evelyn aaya It
la the clothes ana not me at all.
"Tonicht 1 am going to a dance
with Clifford Aaher. the man 1 told
you about. Ho la very kind and 1
think he rather Itkea me, but 1
don't cars for him at all; not lit
that way. i auopose It aounds un
kind, but 1 don t mean to be.
"when are you coming back? It
you would Just send a postcard and
give me aomo Idea, 1 should be very
fileaaed. 1 hope you will not be
Ired of reading this letter; perhaps
1 had better atop, but I wanted you
to know that 1 haven't changed be
caupo you are ao far away. Love
from Aobln."
She read through what ahe had
written with a sense of deep dissat
isfaction, and added an Impulsive
postscript.
"P. S If you would Ilka me to
coma to Germany to aee you, 1 am
aure Bishop will lend me the
money. I know what It coats, be
cause 1 went to Cook's the other
day and enquired."
And presently aba added yet an
ther message.
. "P. P. 8. I've got a new evening
frock, a red one like the one you
liked on the boat."
yES, IDh had chosen It as nearly
as possible the same color as tbe
one Nlcholaa had remarked about;
she would wear It when ha came
borne, If ahe saw him.
And then bard on that thought
eame the andden terrifying know,
dge that cha might never see him
again.
Perhaps, aha thought, ha never
wants to aee ma again, For car
taluly she could not recall even one
Instance where Nicholas bad taken
the Initiative In their relationship;
always '.: had been ahe who made
the advances, and ha who hung
back. . . . .
Georgle supposed that making
those advances would be classed by
Erelyn aa "conduct unbecoming a
lady." Vell, perhaps it was, but
atlll ahe did not regret her actions.
She would do exactly the same
things over again, tor deep Inside
her she realised that her course
had been as much dictated (at least
at first) by pity as by anything else.
Nlcholaa had so determinedly re
fused to see the brighter side of his
future.
"Keep yonr face to tba sunshine
and tbe shadowa will fall behind
yon." Tbe worda floated into bar
mind with vague comfort; worda
which ahe had onca seen written on
an old sundial In the vicarage gar
den at home. Georgle was not on
visiting terms at tbe vicarage, but
ehe had ono gone there with Mrs.
Speara when that lady had been
officiating at the refreshment stall
at a baiaer.
Georgle liked the words: she
sinned suddenly, lifting her eyes to
the sunshine out In the wind swept
street, a strange little feeling of
peace and happiness stealing Into
her heart.
She would keep her face steadily
alwaya to the sunshine and then no
harm could come to Nicholas; ahe
almost felt aa If the maglo bridge
between herselt and Germany were
completed.
Tba door opened suddenly behind
her and Evelyn came In.
8ne looked cross and a little tired,
"So here you are!" ahe said. "Why
In tbe world need you stay Indoors
on such a Una day, and whom are
you writing to?" ahe demanded
catching sight of the letter under
Georgia's hand.
"A friend," Georgle said. She felt
horribly guilty and as If aha had
onca again broken a most stringent
rule In the as yet unwritten book on
love.
Evelyn's discontented -eyes grew
suspicious,
"A friend! I thought you had no
friends," she said sharply. She bad
bad a most unsatisfactory lunch, and
had chosen to consider herself "Ig
nored" by a woman with whom ahe
waa anxious to be friends.
"I haven't many," Georgle said.
"Is It anyone I know?" Evelyn in
sisted. "No."
"A msn, I presume?"
"Yes."
Evelyn stretched out a white hand.
"Show It to me," she commanded.
"No," aald Georgle.
Erelyn flushed dully; ahe was not
really Interested, but she was In the
mood to quarrel with anyone who
gave her tbe opportunity.
"I am your mother, and 1 order you
to show me that letter," she said.
"No," said Georgle.
"How dara you?" Evelyn raved.
"After all I've done tor you. Spent
money on you; taken you out of tbe
gutter of your uncle'a unspeakable
house." ,
GEORGIA went white; It hurt her
Intolerably to hear the only
home ahe had ever known spoken
of In such terms.
"Well, you put me there In tho
first place." she said.
Evelyn burst Into tears.
"To think that my only child
should speak to me In auch a way.
1 was a fool to expect that you would
ever repay mc tor tbe sacrifice J
have made for you."
"What sacrifice?" Georgle asked
In a cold little voice.
"Having you to live with me." She
broke oft as tba door opened and
Bishop walked Into the room.
He looked at his wife and then at
Georgle and a strange little smile
crossed bis face.
Erelyn flew to him.
"Georgle has Insulted me." she
wept hysterically. "She says I'm not
an ordinary mother that she hard
ly knows me, after all I've done tor
her." She looked up Into bis face.
"How can you stand there and allow
me to be treated so cruelly?"
"I think Georgle Is right It she
said that you are not an ordinary
mother," Bishop said calmly. "And
after all, my dear, you forget that
anything you have done for her, has
been with my money.
Erelyn gave a stifled scream.
"And anyway, what la the trou
ble?" Bishop asked In his tired voice.
It waa Georgle who answered him.
' "Evelyn wanted to see a letter I
had written, and I didn't want to
show It to ber."
"I have a right. She Is my child,"
Evelyn sotued.
"Georgia Is over age," Bishop an
swered In blj tired voice, "And I
do not consider that you bare any
more right to read her letters than
I hare to read yours," be added with
quiet meaning.
There was an eloquent silence,
then Erelyn said faintly;
"Of course, If you are going to
side with ber against me 1 bare
nothing more to say."
"That Is good." her husband an
swered calmly.
He turned his back on them both,
and after a moment Erelyn flounced
out of the room.
There was a little silence follow
ing her departure, then Georgle said,
"I'm sorry I made trouble. But she
wouldn't have understood If 1 bad
told her whom I wss writing to."
"Whom were you writing to,
Georgia?"
"A man."
"A very special man?"
"Yes."
His tired smile came again, fleet
Ingly. "Lucky man," he aald.
"Oh, but he doesn't like me," she
said quickly. You see he'a married."
"And no doubt he wishes he waa
single," Bishop answered ber. "Who
was the cynlo who said that mar
riage was a cage; those outside
longed to get in, and those inside
longed to get out."
"I don't know," Georgle said. "But
I'm beginning to think It's rather
true," she added mournfully.
Bishop made no reply.
fCopyrisM, 1MI. Don Med ay Boron)
1 Tomorrow, Qeorgla unavoidably
gives pain to s friend.
WHEN TAGS COST LESS
aT tTir fM tills W f tDI A
Ul of UD.saiMU of jcunvnt uto- lot Oklahoma OHy
mobile llcciue plates wrr toMied up
to Weduwdny noon. auto motor to
hide depnrtment offtclnli niiiotinced
There were 77 024 set om pinto
iMtiert during the corrcupondlnn pe
riod In 19.13. The gain for thla year
wa 73,397.
, A dog and a rabbit are the beat ot
pala at the home ot T. R. Dawson
FUME Gill
BAN FRANCISCO, July (UP I
Blonde-curled Linda Olornl. eight-
year-old daughter of a San Francisco
Importer, let herself out of a base
ment storeroom of her own residence
last night and ended a three-day po
lice search Instigated by her parents,
who believed she had been kidnaped
or lost.
The girl hid herself away early July
4 to enjoy a boa of candy made by
her ateptnother to send to relatives.
Fearful of punishment, she subsisted
on candy for three days and nights,
rather than come out of ber hideaway.
Keller Marts Term
SALEM, July 7. VP) Frsnk Keller
Jr.. began a five year sentence at
state's prison today. He was convict
ed of violating the blue sky Isws,
while serving aa sales manager for the
Empire Holding corporation.
WASHINGTON. July
dicatlons of returning
1. (API In
confldence In
the nstlon's bsnk wsa noted todsy
In figures showing a decline tn the
rush for postal sarlngs depositories.
The banking crisis swelled the to
tal of postal sarlngs deposits to II."
Ill, 170,385 st the end of March, an
Increase of 108,002,815 over Febru
ary. Then came swift efforts to reopen
closed banks and rehabilitate the
general banking etructure. By the
end of May the rate of Increase la
postal savings bad dropped sharply.
The total on deposit April 91 wsa
ll,IB7,6S1.78, an Increase over March
of 8,076,403. May 31 the total was
SI. 118 342.117, an Increase over April
of a20.690.329.
! Postal officials believe the June
total will show an even greater rate
of decline.
S'MATTER POP
By C. M. PAYNE
VJeKl'Po'P66T)
A $TR4T U7 IN '
ATJsewT mimceTj
jiiui i una
L. j L, (Copyright, 1933. by ThsjBtU Syndicate, Inc.) ffif
THE FAMILY ALBUM.. BITIS
WIHIMfS
By GLUYAS WILLIAMS
mis ThMjiv he cahy
Take TriMT6 THE M0Vtt$
ftrJlfcHT; HE'S 60T-TO6O
over bills, shuts him
self Ifl stv
ATftRrftlFArJ HOUR Of
MARKEf 8IU, SHOWS foR
PnV'SSAKETti SHUT OFF
THE RADIO v..
6ESIVJ5 ML WEB h&A,'rl
CWA PRESENTLY frlEV
DirNT HAVE AKV ASPA"
RA6U&0STrlE8W, PID
THEY ?
CAN'T MAKE ANVONE HEAR
BECAUSE FAMILY" IS READ
IK3 ALOUtf. STORMS lti
10 LIVING ROOM TO SEfilE
The asparagus matter
I
WlfE INTERRUPTS REMW6
ToeootfER SL1F5, AT END
OF HM.FAN HOUR TlKDlKS
ir was vinegar , he
MERElV MiaREW If
6ttt OVER ADDIfiON A
GAIfJ SEtfiKG ATofAUV
PirfcRENT RESULT TWM
SiX pKC'ACv'S ErTOii
IVRIfES OUT CHECKS
FOR ALL eiLL'i.ASfriEf'
ARE, ANP SOES WEAR!
LV.fb BED
"''.l Pyridleate, Inc.)
7-tJ
TAILSPIN TOMMY Tell-Tale Smoke!
By GLENN CHAKFDS
and UAL FOUBKS3
STOMP THAT
cmuose out
an' lct4 aa
sir tn
TMEY CAN'T
B FAR. IP" J.:
THEY'RE Jp:
LUS6IN . )--
SOt.0 . J
I,...-, ... ' 1 I 1 il -r
to es tosses m:r.ap v mmw s T oh ah- ,T y vj " v
i . y:-vv'7 - r-uit i i i -ruavr srt.wc ufx r.fiMfi ta turn i ncrc irAn . z, x
BuRlVr WILL NEVER fSJc P'RE 'N f- Vl XUAT1P ANt TOGETHER. 1 Swa HAVE J VVnVS t
get iwtR 4'St?TM5 cave-- rr-r" YN sot TO DO A&M VAE'S ALREADY UMSE to the oeen unable S . I
f- PLACeV-. V3-rw 7 V) wlTH IT z FACT WE'VE BEEN IN THE TO SMOKE THEM H ' v-CV'A-T
Uvn mmf;y- t mwmmmM j mm( 2
7 iV't WK''.i-1 S'T.T .V f 8r &?r My .S-7tf " . I r"ert EA.'Mt IS I 7A tVM ..TTS iWU nU Jt?JtJ,lW. . A
BOUND TO WIN Jonathan' Wrath
By EDWIN ALGER
IS0C O N'T T ELL ME fe35c5Si JKsSTcLeAR OUT O' WvEBf f
S5S?f M?S MOW, p-ijW SJSa HERE, BLIMPSOtsj GOOD, SS
-5JStMPKE--WAn''L.l-i WVfy CLOSE ALL. THE feSsilR" MW,
I GET TO fiY--yE6, Ip BOORS,EHPT7 THE J$W-
pf WhE HOUSE! SIR" p HOUSE O' SERVANTS, )r!0mXt
r 1 r v , ' in V aw bee that t aisi-t w. If 7W
;THey AlKT MuCHl
10 TJlL. MR .
COSBY BEN
SENT ME BACK
MEHc to THE
mm
5
jot
AN' WHAT ABOUT MY
iNSTRnrrriOM to
you, SIMPKIE ? DIDM'T
t TELL YO Li NOT TO
LCHVt TMflT HOT
THE NEBBS In His Own Behalf
YES S1R,M -rOU-VE BSEN UMRAITHFUUTO I
YOU Wl HOUR TRUST T CLEAR OUT O' I
OlD. M HERE THIS veRY MINUTE ' I
S IS BUT V , ynu'Dg , -- r- I
By SOL HESS
As TWe TBAU
GOES OM, IT'S
SETTIKJIo TO
LOOK BETTER
FDR LITTLE
PewmV eveny
MIMUTS ,
IT MIGHT BE
THAT VJE'S
IMVJOCKWT
fiFTEK. ALL.
ATTOCKlEV FOR DEPSKISE'.
q: what's sour war-ie?
f: PEKJOLETOtO SMITH. '
Q I VOO AH&TWE DEFEVloaNT
IKJ THE CASE?
A: ip you. ooior believe;
IT CALL. Ikl AT TVe
JAIL. TO SEE ME
Ot AJWOT WAS TME
REASOM, YOU LET
KJORn-MLLE?
J: OECttlJSE
MV FATUER
WAS ILL,
q: woj did you fimd
your father onyour
ARRIVAL. MOME ?
A: I FOUUO MY PATMEflt
MUCH IMPROVED.
O'.twpm jui-w nirki-r
YOU BETURM IMMEDIATELY?
L? V '' V 11
JZml liiL IV.
A: I OiDMT TUiKJK.aS
OOORMixt-J, MV FO51TIOU
WAS SO IMPORTANT
THAT I SHOULD RETURJO
IMMEDia-TEUY I TWCXJSWT
TO TAliE, A LITTLE
VIACATOM 1 WAS SO
HAPPY OVER MV -FATHERS
COWOmOM.
CV. WHY D'DM'T YOU VJRrrE;
A.'. I DlOU'T TWIMK IT WA
MF - .
I I I I
Q: YOU WERE EMGACiEO
TO MARRY MISS
GRUNJTLEV ?
A: yes. sir .
: YOU BORROWED
ZOO FROM HER.?
A'Sme iouph mc
a2oo with -rvjEuuDen
stanjDiios that i PZXV
it olk; io a week
III
I II
(OqtthM, IW3. jj Tli, a.11 SrnSlcla hi ) TrtAi Hcl a.f u s Pa DflW
O 1 YOU WERE SIMCERE
lid YOUR IKITEMTTOM TO
MARRY MISS SRUMTLEY
-ALSO IM PAVlvje, BAC
THE LOAM ?
A; I was MEVER MORE
SINJCERE IU MY UFE
QIWMV DiDMT YOU WRfTE
HER DuRitOo YOUR
ABSEJOCE ?
A: vll eer i started
SO LETTERS AMD THEY
SEEMED SO 5ILLV l
TORE THEM UP.
in r-TT v.ll-t . TORE THEM UP.
Q I YOO LOVED MISS SRUMTLEY? Q: DIDklT vr I Ocrai ,-rrr
A I J J DID- I TvOUSHT SHED THAT MISS SBLIWTLEV
MAKE a soi iri.ir-iir-1
LIFE'S COMPAMIOM
i sy fiU'Wv
WOULD THIIOX tTOTfAJOUE
YOU DlOUT WRITE?
A". 1 DlDMTTHlMK
WWEkJ MISS SRUMTIEY
ASREED TO
H ATRI MOMY AIJYIHl Urd
loulo Shake. HER
OWFIDEWCE IU Me.
TO Apr
COWTIKJUEO
to CL
BRINGING UP FATHER
By George McManus
t"' ill
! J Ml
it! a,lTTlvill
a V'
I'M ClTTIM SICK AM
TIRED OF ME FA.MILT
QuARRrLlM ArJOUT
WHERE TO CO THl'i
&UMMF.R-IM COIM
RIGHT OOWM AM'
CT TlCKTiT AM'
ws reserva-
tiomS at Some I
MOUr-rrAlNJ 1
RUORT- I
m
w
i . T-f- A C5 1 w-i Ni t C A' e y- i .
ARE MIS.RABLE WELL.VWTY
OOMT YOO MOVE TO SOME
OTHER HOTEL' YOO ATTTHE
MOSQUITOES ARE AWFUL?
WHY, TVtEY TOLD ME IT WA
COOL OP THERE- REALLY '
Vftl 1 -A TLlt
I V ' "C- 1
D.S
" rIMPOSSlgLE.? j
---Jti ' il y..,. s
5
WELL, DEAR1 VOU ' ' f
j.. HAD BETTER COME
. " T HOME-I COESS J ,1 (
THE MOUMTMN4 Oij'
- ARE fMO PLACE TO j TfpJ I' I
.in tPEtsio ones J -Ul , '
Y l VACATION- !'
I I iv,. 1, I I I . Ii K.nt Tn, ,
i guess its
BETTER TO STAT
HOME AM' LET THE
FAMICY QUARREL
all Summer
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