PAGE SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOKD, OREGON, MOXDAT, JULY 8, 1935 READY MADE Wlf .BY CORALIE ST-ANTON . 8YX0P8I8: Laurie Uoore viae made a widow when her husband n'i lost trying to fly the Pacific Mark Albery, owner 0 an airplane factory, ia interested in Laurie, and Laurie admire him. Now ahe ia re turning to London from Liverpool, where ahe haa pone to aee her dtneer aiater Oladya open In n ahow. She haa been aoved from foiling out of the train by a gruff stranger, whom ahe ia trying to thank. Chapter Three THE TRAVELER l-ON'T bother with thanks," the ; stranger returned. T didn't know there was a girl left who would admit that she didn't do ererythlng properly." Another slap In the face. What an odious man! She could not help looking at him. as he sat In his corner, reading. He held the paper In a curious way, far from his eyes. So she could see his face. It was an unusual face, cast In a rough mould, though lean. The brow square and rugged; the nose bold, with a slight upward tilt; the mouth long, firm, angry-looking. But his eyes gave her a little shock when, accidentally, she caught his direct gaze. They were the strangest going to pieces. Women running the country women In Parliament, swimming the Channel, winning the King's Cup. racing at Drooklands!" Really, he was Impossible! Laurie gave him a sarcastic look, and laughed coldly. "You don't seem to like women." -'Don't know much about them," he said, and, meeting her blue eyes, his own strange pale ones lit up with an unexpected smile. "Dare say they're all right In their place. But not running the country and setting the pace." That smile gave Laurie anothor shock. It was only In his eyes, not on his lips, and lust as If a bright light had been lit behind them. It was mocking, challenging, but It was human, which, up till then, he had not seemed to be. "You prefer living abroad?" she asked rather stiffly. "I've had no choice lately. No, I don't prefer It. I think the whole world's a pretty rotten place." OU seem to have a grudge 1 against all ' the world," re marked Laurie, ruffled, although she did not realize It, by the fact that he did not take the slightest In terest in herself. "I guess I have," he replied curt ly. "You aee, I've only Just lately ... -mMiM "Hava you been away from England long?" the asked. eyes she had ever seen. Light, clear eyes, grey, startling In his deeply tanned face. Steel grey she thought at fir fit, but when he looked up they seemed almost white, like snow with a shadow on it, Htit hair was dark brown, growing SQuaroly back from his forehead, and was rather untidy. 1 His face went with his manner, Laurie thought A pity he was such a boor. It might be quite a nice face. Especially when his eyes were bent down on his paper, and his thick dark lashos shadowed the high cheek bones, It looked as if It might be a very nice face. But he evidently had a horrid disposition. Presently he put down his news paper and got un. "I'm going t have some tea," he said. "Would you like some?" "No, thank you." answered Laurie, on her dignity. "But don't you want anyT You were trying to buy a tea basket!" "I know. But I don't want any now." She emphasized the last word. "All right!" He slipped off his overcoat and went out. He was tall. His figure expressed abstract qualities, as his face did. Ills mouth was angry. Ills broad shoulders were Impatient. Ills clothes were very shabby and looked foreign. She supposed he was a traveller from abroad. CKVERAL people passed going to the dining car. Laurie was dy ing for a cup of tea. But pride for bade it The man had asked her and she had refused. She could not help getting up and looking at his suitcases. But thero was no name on them, not even a label with his destination. Ho enme back. "Tastes good, one's first cup of English toa!" he said In the same abrupt, Impersonal way. "About the only thing that hasn't changed in the old country, I expect." 1 Laurie resented his manner so much that she tried to prevent her self from answering. But her Interest wns too strong. "Have you been away from Eng land long?" she asked. "Ages since I wos home. It was bad enough last time. Everything POLICE PUT CLOAK recovered my sight. I've been blind for for a long time." "Oh!" Sho melted Instinctively. "I'm sorry. That must have been dreadful. But nron't you glad that you've got your Blht back? I should think that would nmko you like th world." "I'm an ungrateful devil, I sup pose. I grudge the time when 1 couldn't seo -the waste! You don'l know what It's like to be helpless, nil In the dark, not to be able to move, when you're used to an actlvi life." "Of course, it must have been aw ful for you," Laurie assented. It wai as If an Invisible wire were stretched botween them, and on It a tiny tone had been Btruck that rang with an unknown but plensant sound. "Are you quite cured?" sho added gently. "They say so. It wns a kind ol norvouB trouble. FUit who knows! It may come hack." "You mustn't think so." Thers seemed to bo nothing more to say. IIo took up his paper again, and Laurie, overcome by a sutiden shy ness in his presence, decided that, after all, she would go and have a cup of tea. The trail was rushing through the Northern suhuftis. In a few minutes they would bo It, St. Pnncras. and the great world of London would swallow them both up. Laurie had lingered over her tea as long ns possible. When sho camo back, her fellow traveller was In the corridor, smoking a clgaret that smelt very nice. Ho stayed there for some time, and when he entered the carriage again, Laurie was gathering her things together. "funny, Isn't it," he said In the same abrupt way, "when I was blind I didn't caro about smoking a bit?" "Yes. very strange," sho agreed. She could not understand why, as he so obviously disapproved of his fellow creatures, and particularly of her sex, ho should take the trouble to talk to her at alt. Sho looked up and found his eyos fixed on hor with an Intent, pene trating glance. (Copyright. I9JS, Coralu Stanton) pti formnnre o( "nil It's Klnmour." Hut it w.i-v not until nn nltiMidnnt from "Oertlc's Girl Show" finally brought the bhivk clonk that they would permit the rUle to bo(ln. SAN DIEOO, Calif., July S. AP "Lady Oodlva" rode again lat night but he was draped In a black cloak. It wr.s two members of Chief of Police George L'enrs' vice wpiad that , cieninndrd wuue of the -sensation" taken from the performance. But "Gold Gulch Gertie." who cre ated a nenMttlon Saturday night In her ilrst ride, didn't give in until after more than an hour of wrangling with the jwace officer. "Godiv" was ready for her ride through gold gulch, the exposition's '4ter camp, when the two officers ap proached. She pleaded with the of ficers, even threw it thin and narrow trip of orange cloth over her shoul der which ahs u uia would rob hei INDIAN MURDER TRIAL IS OPENED IN EUREKA El Kl K A. r.ihf . July 8 API Eureka's first teiieuil court murder trial in 2.1 yr:ir-t opened here today, with Jnhni'.y Joe. ,VS-yer-o!d Klam ath Ituttnn. ivihM) of murdering an other Indian. Kiuhe Mitchell. Ji. last M.m-h M. 1 he b! n Mitchell, who rind been stabbed to tle.it h. ;t found beside a trttll on tl'.e I loo pa Indian reserva tion, near here, thus plncmg thecse In the hands n federal authorities. P;une M: We'll I'.auI away JOUI FORMER WIFE OF VANDERBILT 2ND TAKEN BY DEATH NEW YORK, July 8. (AP) Mrs. draft am Fair Vanderbilt, the former Virginia Pair who married Wllll&m K. Vanderbilt, 2nd, in 1890, and di vorced him In 1B27, after eighteen years of separation, Is dead of pneu monia, ' The two daughters, Muriel and Con suelo, were at her bedside yesterday In her town home on East 93rd street. Her son, -William K. Vanderbilt, Jr., was killed In an auto accident In North Carolina in 1933. Announcements incident to Mrs. Vanderbllt's death made no mention of age. At the time of her marriage her age was given as 21, which would make her 67 at her death. Mrs. Vanderbilt was the daughter of the late Senator James Graham Pair of Nevada. She was born In San Francisco and lived there until her father's death In 1694. Her share of her father's estate-i-made up of a vast silver fortune from the famous Corn stock lodge was estimated at $5,000, 000. When Mrs. Vanderbilt obtained her divorce in Paris she charged Vander bilt with "moral desertion and con tinued absence." Vanderbilt, suing at the same time, charged "Incompat ibility and coolness." river and caught nothing. Then, while they rowed to the bank, a large trout Jumped into their boat, they said. SHAKES URAL AREA KRASNOVI8HEKSK, Ural Area, V. 8. S. R., July 8. (P) A meteor. which passed high over this town In a fiery streak today, exploded with such force It shook the houses throughout the district. It passage was accompanied b7 a thunderous noise. The explosion, presumably before striking the earth, occurred three minutes later while the sky wns still marked with a smokj trail. Oregon Weather. Slightly cloudy tonight; Tuesday fair with rising temperature In in terior; moderate west wind off the coast. EL STABBEDBY WIFE ASTORIA, Ore.. July 8 (AP) Mrs. Margaret Hart, resident oi Stanley Acres near Seaside, was lodged in the Clatsop county Jail here yesterday as a result of the fatal stabbing of her husband, Stanley Hart, 40, a logger, early Sunday morning. Sheriff J. V. Burns said the trag edy was preceded by Hart's object ing to staying at home while friends were being entertained at the. Hart home. He had gone to stay with a neighbor, Joe Haslet, deputies said, and later when he observed his wife walking along the road toward the Haslet house he had gone outside to meet her. Hart died a few minutes later of knife wounds. Mrs. Hart was scheduled to have & hearing In circuit court here to day. Hart was employed as a logger. Fishermen's l-uck. A8HVILLE. N. C. July 8. (AP) P. V. McCanless, Sr., and his son fished all day in the French Broad THE FAMILY ALBUM-LOCKING UP iocK6 up -the house, ierV 6im To BE 6Ef 1iN6 TO BED Bv GLUYAS WILLIAMa 7- HAlfvYAv" UPSTAIRS, WIFE caus would he mind BWN6IW6 IN HERSWEPfltR FROM The veranda 6ETS SWEMER , WIFE CAU.1W6 DIP HE LOCK TtfE. BACK DOOR BECAUSE WILFRED'S AT THE DANCE AhJD MAVKoTHAVEHISKlV grumbles That h dobnT like leavik& poors unlocked, but 60e5 and unlocks BACK P06IO STARTS UP WIFE CALUH6 IT'S AU RI6HT To LOCK If, SHE JUST RE MEMBERS REMINDING. Wilfred To Take key" LOCKS BACKDOOR, AtSO UNLOCKS FRONT DOOR To MAKE SURE PORCH L16HT IS OUT, AND LOCKS If P6A1N S0E5 AND MAKES SURE HE LOCKED VERANDA DOOR AFTER 601N6 OUT To 6ET SWEATER- 60E5 UP AT LPfeT final -Trip down 1b MAKE SURE HE DlDtO'T ABSaJf-MlWDEDlY &0L.1 Ran" Tinni? af, WELL AS LOCK Iff. AND 50 To BEP (Copyright, 1936, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) S-MATTER POP By C. M. Paynt By Hal Forrest r u.u.uaA SRF5 la. la-la. Ek- i la. la f', v e w si r nri.v. " j jT k (6pyrlght,' 1936, by Th Bril 80.1 TAILSPIN TOMMY Jose Displays Sportsmanship! XST WHEN I jfF , f AH.; 7 f5kT "SJSWS S- LJ-TOMMV 5 "PROP-THATS ALL . V HS SW iOv VM'fe,, , TnVh )lp YW jammed-- but (rsitt - ,wA3), jk kn SW Fm, fWm jo l mt A BEN WEBSTER'S CAREER Dawn ' . Bv Edwin Alger TVIE FIRST FAINT 6LOW OP CWWrOVERTHE I If EVERVTHIN6S AH PLAIN AS THE NOSE ON- f AN1 THE 6PAV GHOV AN'CLAMMV V BEN, 1 JU5T READ A LETTER OiSWtT MOUNTAINS, HAD COME BEFORE THE ONES FACE, NOW-LOCOMOTIVE WAS A! RDNNIN P FI66ERED ON SOME PROFITABLE HI-JACWN- 1 O THE eOVS BPOU6HT f RANCH WAS REACHED, ANO "SHERIFF BOVCE THEM LON6-HORNS ACROSS THE BORDER AN' K WELL , THE WHOLE WT AN1 KABOOOLE l ' UP TO ME -ME OLD AUNT MORGAN TOOK. CHAR6E OP AFFAIRS CHUCK. BACK, BRINCjIN' IN 'BOUT A HUNDRED THOUSAND S3 NOW IN THE HANDS o' THE LAW BECAUSE J v V MARV lb AILlN' AN' lE 60T CHAPIN, DESPERATELV WOUNDED, AND CLAMMY DOLLARS WUTHO'POPE rjQ-SH I VOU HAD EVES K1 VOUR, HEAD AN' USED , LEAVE AT ONCE A, V WERE RUSHED TO HADDOCKVILLE-SO.TOO, WAS ON EACH r"77f V 'EMj- I J -- ( j ALL THAT REMAINED OF LOCOMOTIVE j?pJL jit ffLK I'-'i 8 J 1 j THE NEBBS Big-Hearted Nebb fJOMERES vJUEReDlOVOU L" S" vajEIU.-EMMA IS 5WOUJINJG I WELL, I PROTECTEOA JJOTWIKIG WROtOG, BUT 1CKAWD GET NOUR 'WPORMCCnOW, I VOUR IOOO CHECK TO ) flffpfrl! K IMTEESTS j TOLD HES TO STICK . 1 UNJDEFJSTAIOD V" 11'?,? V ( BODV- 5W SAID IP IT J V UAAJXVS TVE CHECK IM THE. BVOK SO(je 1MTO XO M 'S FORTUIOEj I WASNJ'T FOR YOU , SHED L-il, , ViTW TMA.T ? AS FAST AS SUE. COULD MINJINJG fCS. ? ' GOTTENJ ONJLV r-L- yr TT7 THE. VJAV SOORE SPRINJKl'mS )SiNjE.ss ? Wp. J oSioo anjd mo half m! Y I i-; Vnourooush AROUIOO IT r ) I Lbf-T3w 5SlRESTOCK ' V Pi ( V VvCAMTTAMDRRST, y!. . " . By Sol Hest THE BUNGLE FAMILY Suspicion By Harry J. Tutuill My dispatch l LI nvike a motion my papers..) Nut we all C.' Harttord a vo thanks Tor finding. rase- round: riereT' room. v teof just can't understand how it was found behind mat mm mu The papers.. .uesjell anyhow, now J I know all here...M ah, that Hartford h positively I they have been r Wound them... moved that taken out, tat it l chair ten put back, .Ml. 'j I 't:ws in the V, l l-octtivo hi I am r ,4. li Ilim On the corner of each paper is a little mark., ah, where they have been held rjr ohoteCraph'tViV-i them.eh Sir? I'm afraid, mu dear Count, that I don't quite follow you. All I know -j. h."nl unitr Kxllj, cA papers is mar i JWl happened rnem.en ir :tJk i 1 to find Cakdale?) V S AA S them y r, v:3V and.. rn. - La 4 1 ill W tyi ' h -1 bL J-u:l must nuC lunch and - l Vi l CI i uoii... Tricked! Me! RiJ.ht before! Sorry. but I already our eues lion tinit thoca i-( k.... j.i I quite clever. We r Well Colonel.Mrs, BunJ!e,Pe4,4i)... I II sau au devoir.