WOMEN WON'T TALK J 'BY "RENE RYERSON MART CHAPTER I TT all began the day before. Naturally, I didn't know that anything was beginning then. I mean It began the day before wo found the body. That was on Wednesday, and It was unreason ably hot for early June, hot with a muggy, uncomfortable stickiness that presaged the storm to come. Margaret had come up to my room after dinner to finish ar ranging my things. We'd thought we had the house all aet for the summer, and then that morning had come a tele gram from Kathy she's my old est granddaughter, child of Wal ter's first marriage saying that the had changed her plans and was coming to stay at Kraiktower for a couple of weeks before go ing to New York. , i Originally Margaret had un packed my things in the turquoise bedroom, which has the sitting room attached. They are the rooms I usually occupy at Kraik tower. Connie, she's Walter's sec ond wife, and a comely thing with her blond hair and tawny skin, had been assigned the mulberry room at the other front comer of the house, while Jack and Judy, the twins, and their nurse occu pied the rose room In between. Margaret is the only servant who regularly sleeps In the house. She has the back bedroom at the head of the stairs. Margaret has been with me for 30 years. But Kathy's coming upset this neat arrangement. Everyone at Kraiktower In lummer wants a bedroom fronting the lake. Not only because of the lake breeze but because they are the only decently furnished bed rooms in the house. Ten years before when Michael and I had the house done over, ex pecting to make it our year-round home, we had these four spacious front rooms redecorated in the colorful modern manner with all new furnishings. Our old furni ture and the family heirlooms from which we could sot bring ourselves to part were relegated to the back bedrooms. As a result one of these is done in atrocious golden oak with a brass bedstead which was our wedding bed, and the other, the one Margaret sleeps in, is a con glomeration of odds and ends in cluding the enormous black wal nut wardrobe which Grandmother Pottier brought over from France with her a century ago. So following receipt of the tele gram that morning, Margaret and I bad gone into consultation and decided it would be best if I moved into the mulberry room, gave Kathy the rose room, and put Connie into the turquoise room. Then the twins' small beds could be put up in the adjoining sitting room. That would leave the golden oak room to serve as Walter's dressing room when he came down. Miss Lake, the nurse, would have to go out to the tower to sleep. Everyone was suited except Miss Lake. She sulked all day after Connie apologetically in formed her of the change. She felt herself a bit above the other servants and didn't like the pros pect of sleeping in the queer, four-storied tower which gives our summer place its name, and furnishes living space for the chauffeur, cook, and housemaid, besides serving as a garage. As I said, Imogene Lake sulked and nut in her time fussing un necessarily with the children ana left all the labor of moving our clothes and personal belongings to Margaret and Clara, the up stairs maid. It was no wonder that Margaret was tired and a bit snappish. She finished arranging my toilet things on the dressing table, put my favorite books where I could reach them without getting out of bed, and with a muffled, "Good night, Miss Marthe," at last hob bled out of the room. I was too listless to turn the radio on after she had gone. Be sides I had some grim thoughts stalking my conscience that might as well be faced then as later. Kathy's dark eyes that morning when she had rushed in and grabbed me in one of her hoy denish hugs had thoroughly up set me. FUNNY BUSINESS "No matter liow tlic ship lurches, it never spills my soup COPYRIOHT, 143. NEA 8EHVICE. INC. Thoy were brilliant and bright, but they weren't the eyes of a girl who is happy because she is soon to become a bride. And Kathy should have been. She was going to New York to buy her trousseau. I HADN'T been altogether happy about the coming marriage, anyway, although Walter Biid Connie were so relieved to think that Kathy was going to settle down and get married respect ably married that they talked of nothing else. Now that I had looked into Kathy's glittering eyes 1 was even unhappier. George Baker was all right, In his way. A well-bred, well-iai-lorcd young man. He was indus trious, too, devoted to building up the sizable fortune which had been left him into one, two or three times as large via the bank ing business. You couldn't pos sibly find a fault with him, but you couldn't find anything excit ing about him either. When I thought of Kathy, our Kathy, as his wife my mind bnjged down. The prospect was too unutterably drab beside the memories Vf my own earl- mar ried days when Michael had had nothing but his youth and an idea and every day had a brand new and bewildering adventure. ... I sighed. Perhaps there weren't any love marriages like that any more. The next moment I scourged myself: "Don't be a hypocrite now . . . sighing and feeling sorry because Kathy is being cheated .as if you werent to blame. ..." Hadn't I helped break up that early 'teen-age infatuation be tween Kathy and Derek? If we had let Kathy go her own head strong way then, even as I had when I ran away and married Michael, she wouldn't have been facing any cut-and-dried, mon eyed marriage to George Baker now. "HOME SWEET HOME" IN FILET CROCHET by Alice Brooks Keeping those home fires burn ing is an important home-front job today! This filet crochet wall panel is timely and very charming, too, with its peaceful country scene. Do it in either fine cotton or string it is needle work that will fascinate you. Pattern 7564 contains chart and directions for panel; stitches; list of materials needed. To obtain this pattern send 11 cents in coin to The Herald and News, Household Arts Dept., Klamath Falls. Do not send this picture, but keep it and the num ber for reference. Be sure to wrap coin securely, as a loose coin often slips out of the envel ope. Requests for patterns should read, "Send pattern No. , to followed by your name and address. '.''',." A 'i r fi ( i (it .'Y:V... &fi5ihSB!?S53M 1 1 t 'I POESEN AT QUARTER. ( J COMMTrEOl I WAS wZwtfO A-A 700 IN AW LOOK PBPM.SSIOkj.Iiu f OKAV.... ootS IT LOOK? J V.f p r-- ' v."-" S3SfS&GSS I BH AnWMfl i ) AMERICAN MOMEYjfc () rly .fe IF ONE PUU.S THE DOWN, t ' J 5?SiiWi y "Ozi & r THEY ARE still up " Wc TO THE MYSTERIOUS -ftfnj 1 1 l W A-rV' 'It f XCZijK5:'' . "Jmn - tfa Svl ' j- a ALLEN IP BERXSTRESSER TRUNK N HIS HEAD" "v JVv2ff. U3 V,IX-XSOq L A NTf' " '' L Weakly I tried to Justify my self. After all, Derek Grady hadn't been another Michael Kraik. Subsequent events had proved that. Derek had since spent a term in a reformatory and was, I understood, on parole now for another offense. It was well we found Kathy that time and brought her back home. I finally fell asleep and slept like n log in spite of the heat and a bad conscience, and woke to a day that promised to be a rcnlica of the one before. If only It had beenl (To Be Continued) THE CO (PONS Selfishness and complacency JMor By Fred Harmon in the past have made us pay , No indetdl It's the regular dearly in terms o ,umn ms. I VMHER6. in V 1VE IT EASY, Doc .' 1 AH RECiOrt "MtY If 1 f Efct juin MiDiN'MiSS DELIA'S 1 f AND LOAD In' 6AO 0ACn 1 folks who sometimes run ..iffm-ino While it mnv AR They, EOuS TM' SAL'S RESW . NEED IT-TOW SILVER DOLLM?3. BUT 1 CAN'T take ( LIP WITH ROCK9-. JuST IN J, short of money and like the ery ana sulfinng. While it may s , , , .. an' iTieo'vi like That H&amy load in' Chance of lOSisJ' n fOR VCASt.-,- .L convenience of Purchase Cou- be difficult for us not to feel l&lhjl TtWBK$i tes5t IChlWB CKS. rSVjkli pons in their purse. Get a bitterness for the Injuries we - fC-'A-SSSo'A-E. as,K6.:i ! j TnreoucjH this Gap l TT Vf4 bookful today and spend have suffered at the hands of the vlM ""77? whw CO Cont? I ; SSSfjl A 1 VJ2!'4 V L- them like cash when you nggressors, let us remember K li -"'7' - "H. 'k sifJU, VYi. ClStiAs c need them. Small down pay- that recrimination and hatred K&mJ I T-m 1' I 5?T;-w'A tCj ) ment usual carrying charge, will lead us nowhere Madame J-?', y vl Vs& J!'' V fNSSJ,&: I ffft'' iiJB,V XJV-LS 'GET YOURS TODAY AT ChiangJCashec , iifl Pfe Ji'H fc ' Your SEARS CREDIT Office California has ladybug farms. l5t lfia M Jl 1 M Jffflth'dl' 1 ( jthe insects being in demand as 3J,,.V f j3v ImXi iM ' THIS CURIOUS WORLD 6y"wTliiIm Ferguson JJj ' W JJ Wj fm.. j liijpggg jh Froeklej and His Friondi By Bloiior II THE MOON. WHEN FULL, GIVESOFF I jS. II ' : " w i i . ii ... Boots and Her Buddies By V T. Hamlin I U. S. OFFICIAL HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puizle (abbr.) JT- ' A 6 WtU-OVS ,sVL I WVSWf.'o frVV "WE. iVIU COV l,7Pictured , i lTpEv0B ZOBeverage rff-'iyll " ' I iJvi2Z- T- ? tXOKtWEKSV f &H NMTHt mi V 13 Winglike part OlR.rlA1,DAGE v E DEf 27Brag FC$& Ll-r- rT('VKT WI'X 1 MvWf OLW W"t "" W" 14 Within EjlWiDs', A2.upN2BLimb 7) WMjT? 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Williomt Our Boarding Houio With Moor Hoopla pp V7hb THINKS THEY 1 IAREWwu'THE ZTf HOVJ'D HOO Vf HEW MErtf JOO ' rrM AWAKE NIGHTS N KNOW SO LITTLE ! PUBLIC ENIEHAN WHO'S l GET SO v-l RELISH Pr-) THINKIN" UP A NASTY HE WON'T EVEN 1 ! TJOOM&O TO TRW ON HOPPED UPAStHE PROSPECT Or- V?- U--: v CRACK TO HAND ) ASK. 'EM " HOW VI NOOSES TOAORROW f OVERNIGHT? IS VlSITIri FWl-AER ) y TT ITTIT 7HARMV ARE YOU T" HE'S IN3UD6& REMCrW'S AND IvUS IN '"spec- 'Br-Trr, 1 v C00KX ?-Nou E 1 were a& 3wl,,i voell, -i --7 -) 25 SaLvVhI?- ) TmoVkT yEC7 V A CONTESTED AS UNSETTLED If HOVM VJOULD MOD M : J,?'" SMPW FROMV A BARTENDER WHTH N AS A CM V LlKE A DISH ZJ .-JigM J So HE'S gfttiu' rV MLsXX I A BUSTED CASH RE&-J RIDING A S ) OP SOUR. ,;- tfisftfL now Jlp1" fg&3ft NT V rTV-- --d VWN a flood .Vn now long is AiasKaa coast line? t (abbr.) 20 Beverage 22 Cat's cry 24 2000 pounds 26 Stairway post 27 Brag 28 Limb 30 Moisture 33 Negative word 36There i 37 Tree fluid 39 Dolt 40 Tempests 42 Contend 44 Decay 45 Weep 46 He escouraga produc tion 47 Near 48 Not shut 49 Reign 51 Tint 53 Sun 55 Metal 58 Field Artillery (abbr.) 59 Proceed 60 Doctor of. Entomology (abbr.) 3 Matched ' pieces 4 Slow pace 5 At any time 6 Music note 7 Moist 8 Mountain 1 8 "Old I Dominion f State".(abbr.) 10 Midday nap . II Wood sorrel 15 Seine 17 Fox 19 Isle of Man -Ic t el.-; k cloUl! Ii '.ccq 39 Doit ? Hsfir L-.rr..A.'P LW 1 I F s-L V 'A. bi x I Ailop Oop HEV, WH&CE. 15 WHY Or 5YCACUGE.r AN WHV DOES HE THINK WE QE OOP.. .I'M ONLV IHINKIN& 7Ht PROM THERE? Littlo Orphan Annio WOtlDER WHKTS SO IMTERESTIM DOWN IN LEAPIN" .II iim AlD K,-ZZZZJ UaJA.fir. fawip TEN OP EM--AC3AINST A WALL-SALTS WITH A MACHINE QUNl HES GOIM TO KILL EM I TK MMN COORTYAROl H&1 WE'LL BE ABLE TO SEE FROM HERE' OH, POOR COU06E. VOURt. FCDM MUSM. SVPACUfit' IN ALL CICILV. .IHMPINf, 6VRACU5AN5 HAVE ( JLIMO.' I RJNH 0 1ND . WONLtV.', StiMN&I IHt ROMANS.' lT LEAPIN" UZARDSl T YES-IT IS II F HAl HAl HAl TAKE YOUR II TENOP EM-AC3AINST 1 mS 61 B LAST LOOK AT TH' VQRLD "OER V UZARDSl UNCLE MALCOLM I 1 1 A WALL-SALTS WITH I JUSTICE: Ifl H tlZl VORLOl SWINE! WHY DO I ; I a mqchinp GUNl HE'S V ANNIE 11 VOU NOT BEG FOR MERCY. EH? I ll M COIN TO KJU'EMl V-,C IB CRY VOL-IS. UlTLERt J H OH, POOR UNCLE MALCOLM!- . J rTELLME.OLOSlUB.V- "" . "-..WIO (TV 6IMPLV II HAVE VOU fcVUtt X4 A.VE, eONf NHO THINKING v t I HEABD OF A WNo NOT HEACO THROWN 6L0PV N.I I CHAP NAMED. Of KING HIECON'5 ) TLP(50 RT.' VfltW. A 1 V I "KLninuutia.' V HKti ciKtuiv in int. i tjwt.K: ihi I By Martin By Harold Gray or coneer .-