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Show Tin: .101 UN M.. I. ION. 'S I Ml I a- -0 STAGE SCREEN IIU.IM IG RADIO l V A- B Y XVI CHAPTER :..T. A R Continued. 23 Nat, pulling Skippy In an express migon, came up to the side of the Hello!" he said, his smile widen- recognition, displaying a mining tooth. "Im not Admiral rmtfi Bjid now that there isnt any snow. 'Of course not How stupid of j N I should have known. me This is , i $ , m cousin. Miss Oliver, Nat, and Sk ppy. said Gay. i e .x Hello, Nat, Kate s.d. "Hello, to auud any moe fru-- n Kr" Was he, by h.s silence, nuk.i g a cle,.n break as etlect.vely as sfie had meant to make it when she ad wr.t-tethe letter which Mary, th.s 1 n morn.ng, had She started up as Mary returned to the porch. He isnt at home, Mary sa d H.s mother thinks t! at he may have gone to a cabin d, wn cast near Machias John Is at the calm Gay's voice was light and breathless. Skipy. They aren't sure. They've had Hello. Nat grinned again and no word They're holding h.s m.a.l." Sk ppy ducked his head. Of course he has. I int Is Dr. Houghton in now?" Gay Gay glanced at her watch. think" Ml.ed, feeling her heart leap and We can make it before night. Thar.k plunge. you, Mary. I must And Kate. No, hes not here now. Youre going there? Mary asked .'You mean he isn't here at the It's a fairly lorg drive. doubtfully. house? I had expected that you would stay 'He went away last week. Grand-fat- : for lunch, at least er came home. He brought me No. We're going W.sh me lack, a whole fleet of boats. I'll need Mary. it 'Brought me a boat! Skippy Mary Adams smiled and pressed piped up. hand. 'Is your mother here, Nat? Gay Gays 1 think you'll carry yoar luck ashed. with she said. you, Aya, shes here. Shell be pleased i s I to see Did you, , cr expect. you come CHAPTER XVII b J B Ike way from New York? Course Letter on account of my i vcstlKe bats a on the fire, went Jihn ,s j, j fatner's an officer in the Navy but to the placed kg doorway, stood locking out thats some swell car. "Drive them around a couple of across the lake. Dusk was falling. will you, Kate. Gay opened The last reflection of the sunset had Wcks, ices' faded from the still surface of the ce p.e. the door and stepped out. "I want to water. Across the lake a loon to their mother. screeched mournfully through the si''Hop in, kids. Kate slipped over lence. John least closed the door and reis ai under the wheel. turned to the fire. Nat shouted and Whoopee! ks He should prepare something for Skippy echoed his brothers enthusihe thought, standing irsupper, asm, then ducked his head again. on the hearth with his resolutely The long tan roadster moved away back to the fire. Funny how he had torn the curb. Gay walked up the come to dread getting supper. When s of the house and sounded the had been accomplished, the day that I cker. Mary Adams, herself, was definitely over and night had f ned the door. Her brown face begun. He was able to get through j Crinkled with pleasure when she the day fairly well. While the sun RCtgmzed Gay. shone, he made fishing from the ca"Cme in, she said. This is a noe or lying on the float an excuse fur being out of doors. But the nights surpi.se The wide hallway was familiar, were unbearably lonely. though now there were peonies and He shouldnt have returned to the smpiffri M the vases which in March cabin. He should have taken the t held and feathery walking trip through Canada which pliffnes of pine. Fallowing Mary he had half planned when Dr. to the porch through the living-roohad insisted that he take a which faced the lawn, she remem-tretwo weeks vacation until the Boston her last day here, the day matter was settled one way or anhe sa: after John had brought her in from other. He would be able to make the fr.ki mothers home. They'd been so the decision he must make more she and John, polite to each calmly and with less pain anywhere 0f to. the r, unhappy, remote. Mary must in the world except here. The cabin it for Lave noticed. Was she, too, remem-ng- t was filled with ghosts of Gay. He bering the end of Gays visit here? saw her everywhere, on the couch If she remembered, she gave no with the lamplight falling across her sign hair; seated on the footstool beside Are you alone'" she asked. Its the hearth m a characteristic posimarvelous to be able to use the tion, her arms hugging her knees; porch again. You dont appreciate coming out through the door of the this weather unless .youve spent a bedroom she and Kate had occupied, wintr in Maine. her face fresh and smiling after a "Mv cousin is with me, Kate Oli- long night of sleep, in a jersey and ver. slacks, a ribbon around her hair . . . "On. Ive heard John speak of He hadnt expected to feel as he her. Mary darted up from her did. He had thought that he would Where is she? Why didnt be able to make the decision here. ini; wo cha.r. 0U ber in? He had not questioned his ability to )ieBCo "Ches taking Nat and Skippy for think clearly and logically, to discing thm' eiK a ride. Mary, Gay asked, where pline his emotions. Strange that feS is John?" he had not considered the pignant Miry curled herself into a wick- insistence of memories, the ghosts er chair. I dont know exactly, of Gay that lived on in the cabin. she said. But he must make a decision. If "Has he left here, Gays voice he secured this post in Boston, he faltered, for good, I mean? would have to decide whether he no! d, Yes. He was in Boston last was willing to have her there with 'k btf .wee-- . Mary glanced at Gay. then him, using her own money to proluskut dow-- at her small brown hands. vide a place for them to live or T know. He wrote me from whether it was wiser, for her ultithere." mate good and his own, to make a TTnat there is a chance of his definite break and follow, alone, the in the research department concourse he had charted for himself nect d with the General Hospital? he had declared his love to Km asked eagerly. Father thinks before was all or It nothing. There Gay. certain. John made a could be no compromise. The next farly f"TH0 11 f id.d impression when he time they met there. But would they meet again? He T-usince then, Gay persisted. sensed in her letters a change had Boston now? in isnt in her feeling for him since she had fiVe've been forwarding mail to from her visit to Maine returned letI a jhis mothers. blame her. It had been couldnt He fter from you this morning. Ive for her, as awful pretty . ed to know a edF your handwriting as his visit to New York. estranging She loved well. low. not did that. He He him. question "Tn.s morning? A letter? Ties. Why? Mary asked quick--Tf- r loved her. But was love enough? Was it as fresh and as steadfast I" surPriseas it had been here at the now : was a letter which shouldn't ' cf love sureen WTltten- Gay said. Ive cabin last fall? Could any the the misunderstandings, vive e to head it off or explain. Could to which the bickering quarrels, a mothers in Rockland? their love had been exposed? don't know. Why don't you pb'-? he vSha raused, then said. If you don't Wouldnt it be better of it now. He JCT vraa-- . to think He wouldn't call or call. Ill go there, .1. top with , t . , 1 ti.cx'1 I j bitter-swee- Sar-gea- e sterdj-distan- t, brg IKAE SM1! M R b) hvtd - !u r .mi 1U d hi r s , Hu n He l.vt i bit i ,v tl iv n td t i .iv e ;.t i d l.i lie 1 t 0 e l,.r ; s m t! e K ti ia d the fire c. u f,. ly, t tk . de..l i f tune. Yt 1, w !' i" t ag- b - b - ,rj s j, ; ? c j you 1 I don't There are Id s like to see Debby but it would be better if you jr rt"t i11 re will. She rose, smiled at Gay . omr -ss.onately and went into the : r rflf hour . sat acrc e e b f on the porch lookirg out tue sunny lawn where peo- orr.ed along the ferce and maple tree shaded and sw.rg She w ; s only ,n. absently aware cf the k, vf her eyes rested upon. Every ere every sense in her T V body was ' .0 ln 8 stae B1? , ? k c- . - ire of a wrens sand-be- x John gone away would build a fire in the kitchen range and prepare supper, making a lcng job of it to keep night from coming too soon. He went cut into the dusk, filled a basket with chips and birch logs. Ncne of his senses was secure from ghosts of Gay. The smell of pine needles and freshly chopped wood recalled the night she had slipped out of the cab.n to meet him, the n gut Tcdd Janeway had arrived H.s eyes l.fted above the pile of ch.gs." They had sat there, leaning above the logs. Shed worn a soft uh.te dress fastened up under her cbm and ter hair had curled loosely I.'. 1 ' - ' ' m t t t i ' - s is t i . i i i r 'i ' 'i ' ll i ti d n gre.-- . r I i : fi. t'e r .,1. s.i't i.,cid tie f h in fir .:i He T! i i Corun t ,in i n i I s gn the ! made, be hi aid the ; !..e ...rue a c.,r -- ' ct g m t vm-- i - g i i l i , t a .i frum tig o t: 1 s if ' g v ,i,i Hi ,i ; t g i vi , s .1 J i k v ! , M,n i i i ) Mri ti u.,!v 1 iu v - 4 . i it - - ....I It 'ri i IU r v it.il l It' h.t.i ,, . w . i i 1 cull' v r. t 't I f i I . ,.i the iu e :.t i ' its t d, re m the v hei ge. ptrh.,s viiug Dr Reynold-- , step Any vis. tor ping m tn his rounds w , uld be w i lot n.e Whot v t r it w a Wiuld see the ght and Ct n e in He couldnt leave the h He heard the mi tor of tt e car race, thm dc d! into sdirec as an ign.tK n key was turned. That motor! No one of bis aequo. i.tanci s here drove a car w.th such powtr lbs hand, holdirg a fork ov t r the fish, was shaking. He turned, his heart thumping, a s.ng.i g s, ui.d in his ears. The kitchen door stood open. He saw her coming toward h'm through the dusk, running across the clearing, up the steps. Gay!" he cried, and plunged forward to open the door. She came into the k.tchm, hesitantly, as though the sound of h.s voice had checked the impulse which had brought her swiftly to him through the dusk. Hello, John, she said. They stood staring at each other like strangers. Where did you come from? he asked at last. How did you know 1 was here? I wrote you a letter, she said quietly, "tcll.ng you that I was going to marry Todd I have ncit received it No, it's in Rockland Have you been there? She shook her head. Mary called your mother for me. She, your mother, thought you might be here. The singing in her ears dimmed iier voice to a thread of sound. But if you wrote me that, he asked, why are you here? Because I didn't mean it. I discovered, after Id ma.lod it, that I tried to get to you I couldnt before the letter did. I drove last night to Portland, then on here toHer eyps widened, then day. She swayed, reached out closed. One n ..do at t! ' . r if ,i t i .s l Is l ...O..L.S m a . : . , , m J ,.r r ,i, n, i a v , i - i I 1 mm stilling Ini ilia tlv - ' 1 N i .r.e ! it and I i,. lllllll i .'i ii I i!e- - 44 iiui llh ii'.ff ki i I I I c titi in i i t i i ! t, Ii 4C i 4 w nt. 4i? 's It N I I PT. ( tll I fur s T ... Nj 1 hir )( I i ! I IV .lid'in mv t ( I i Hit ly along d , t)a- - Uir-d- i letwein On gun and Idaho. h.s abv.ss, feimei by the Wallo- a-- t- nmie - fi i s a a1 1 r tl ev - to vt i v. i, h 1,! o It's fir (Ii .mi i.e.Viii lathhniii i . le i ii 1 V e ti f I is t i i i ..m H m ly 1. 1 Autna i mum Aii.-on- a In SALT LAKE CITY MI E YN IKUGI, S Type Furniture Is Latest Building Trend Built-I- n Built in furniture creasing in po is r. - ularity .,i!y j ; in- lann ng a built-i- n , e And, in discovering them, he solved one of the most cunning murders ever to baffle New York's police department. "Hidden Ways," F. F. Van de Water's newest serial, is story you'll like. We promise thatl It's a the kind of a yarn that will keep you gjessing to the final chapter. lively, V tA Win n you See Hedy I.utnurr and Clark Gable in "Comrade X" don't be pu?hd if the fctuiy sums familiar Its 'Clear All Wires." whuh Sp iiu r Tiucy made sevin years ago. The story of an Amin-rar man's adventures in Ku'ua, it s be n re w rdti n to me lode incidents in the recent Soviet milGable dtuws It as itary ventures on assignment instead of " but need Sing Sing," which lie didn't l.ke n ncw-pu- anyw ay. June Me Cloy may win a bet with her husband if you like her well enough in Glamour for Sale, in which site has the second feminine lead. Nine years ago she left Hollywood to make a name for herself as a night eluh singer, and In 1R3G she married and retired. Now she wants to return to the screen; shes bet her husband that she ean make good within six months; If she can't, shell go hae k to being just a wife, ho shes working now in the picture slarring Anita Eouise and Roger Pryor. She has a ehanee at her specialty she sings a torch song. Itut so does Anita Eouise. sue-eeede- d. Dcn.s Day became smg.i g star ed the Jack Benny show became an inflamed kept turn emt cf law school. An lu r.nr graduate of Manhattan college in New Yeuk, Eugene Denis McNulty won a scholarship that entitled him to try city for work several government months. He chose radio, and was doing production work at the city broadcast. rig station, pending h.s entry to law school, when the appendix interfered just as his law classes were about to begun. When he got out of the hospital it was to enter law school that year. He turned again to radio, got onto a sustaining prcigrarn, and made a recording which Jack Benny's agent heard. He was summoned to Hollywood; Benny was looking for a tenor to replace Kenny Baker, you'll remember, and they were auditioning literally by the hundreds At the last minute young McNulty got the job, became Denis Day, and began carving out a nice carter for himself x V Oh! i S AM) MA Jon Hall rrcrntl ct'hhratvfl thrre war of uttinn in the same thair at the ( s Star I heater hroailt uts fie Ihi an nlHriilinu the broudi ust to hear in uff, I tun i I onaford, &in, und tuxs nt i r misled on' Hire H some-f- i Ise uts in hi 11 Ik ultt (lour in the (bents' room, he us m!rn so irs, J nitre sitting i n our uood huh (four 4 f fl ha w fo Nor mu u from Min in mot ''hituer u sum- - das, hu (ouf!nt Uonj. ( ' und )oh ftlune- - they on the hr tifi ap - biot8:l Tt .VI, - li'.'ilivff tot dSi, , CluHiCuf theDisi j;. (,etn:e fluff o u md to not m the siune uMommoJa rimhuittngTratlcr 400 400 ROOMS -t- Pru-.' j200 Rale$; )o BATHS 4-0- 0 Our $200,000.00 remodeling and refurnishing program has made available the finest hotel accommodations in the West AT OUR SAME POPULAR PRICES. CAFETERIA DINING ROOM MRS. J. H. WATERS, I BUFFET Pi.ud.nl DANCE MIRROR ROOM J. HOLMAN WATERSandW ROSS SUTTON Source of Ignorance The fowl of ignorance.- lays the on. egg cf pnde. - DINE The Beautiful Manopri t III 1 - 4 wefl-tc'- d BEGINS NEXT ISSUE TII K told that the players were woikiiif in an extremely small space wlieie it wuuld lie impossible to walth. The real reason, disi losed later, was that Douglas was working in a woman's dressing gown. i'll look silly enough on tin- - s reen, he explained, whin asking lli.tt tiie set lie closed. I "Glory Hunter" her niece, Allegra, was so lovable. However, he soon discovered those things. is ni a g ii v 'Thunder Shield" and that the elderly Miss Agatha Paget was such an amazing woman. Nor that at w '..u m- - i. ns of Oiegon and the Seven Devils range in Idaho, is about 75 miles long For over 40 nults it av ei age s 5,510 fet t in di i th. At or e pun t it l.s 7,!H)0 feet deep, liiii'iu taut almost a n lie ;rni a half from rim i r .in st at n. itu t t ei th.s t J! id i .i- - Hal fl in k, a ta. lined und il.i'iu.illy .sail cl Author of know low - t i ! a- - :n in the United e ih Stall s and in i oi.t mental North Ana ina is Hells lanvoii (in tb rI llie NMOTIIING F. F. VAN DE WATER apartment . 1I n t ( 1 8fp-ridi- house he didn't expect to become involved in a murder. But then, neither did he e, wa mount. A New Mysfery Thriller by swanky New York I i n young David Mal-- T ory accepted a job a switchboard operator in a A ouiig an, I The ft M Snake ciirm r eupbi.nl, uplml-M- i ri d u all si at, i r snn.i t '!u r i icec ( f f.niut irr , the home ( 't r s'lnuM dec .(ir- - will in advance ; bout sin h i m i .. i, t di tails as w t bill is, finish ii g inati iials m d to use According to an nut! nity on hardwood firnshit g. it is important that the right filh rs be med in nccoid-ancwith the roll r ; i d con1 shiny desired, and also that the filhr be wiped at the pro; r r tine. A filhr is basically a mini i a! p.grmrit such as an asbe st s ct t p 'und, s.lua, whiting, or clay, lx und togi tin r with a small amour t it vehicle and thinned with gnsil.re or rroneral spirits. Thire are n .my finishing materials, and nm-- t of them are well known to the home owner. for the table. John! Among those most ifien used are He caught her, held her. She white and orange shdlac, rubbing clung to him. They kissed. Pres- varnish and sp.ar varn.sh. Are you Because there is such a wide ently she drew away. choice ef colors and demands vary glad to see me? she asked. Glad! Oh, Gay! so greatly, each home owner should Will you still be glad when 1 select the color for his built-itell you that Im going to stay? pieces so that they will be in harAre you? mony with the general style of the Always as long as you want room. The natural color of wood me." represents the warm side of the He looked down into her lifted color scale, and, rerr t inhering this face, weary but radiant, her eyes colors should be sdeeted to conriles govern ng shining softly through the tears that form with the Will you take a good decoration. misted her lashes. XVHEN T Milvvn Douglas, vim.uis louiul fi-- Put!' N ieri g. many iu'i s1 eels, l i U' Nrvt Moiil I r a tu iu t Sn Hume of t lx t sf Miiili ,i limit a Iimv tc .lie nul III .ml until II I, till Mu .1 .nul Die (nun ip.ils have minimi lo ollu r in lures. Hi ii i at llie si I fur ' lie M.niil fur III i .ibf.ist, Columbia's lien , 4 t, id-- i .A 8 UlMi M I- - : 1 i k t ,jLii ; a1 i " 4 w r, etg;-- v. latter, n V. fish the he had Cai ire iris and and . ' t i ply .i.t i.j it it i ; it, i ; I eC- - g d v ti !' iS'le, i I 1 nr- - 1 ;v i 1 f i o i.'l .1 Ip- - t 1 :;t . s:i s ;.! ti -- ', ' t' e ',i, i .1 I . 1' stun t u! o i ;,i f t i i , iv - : tr i,l i ! i n : ' tii f i v i i J I i i , . ,i' i ' i t v ( i i . j ' ' . 1 i ; it'-- : i u i ! ' ! - v ft !u , . vc i ! . n 0 i i a - i j t 1 - - It .ii ( i - s v ' ' s ! i ! e ; i.'is, 'il.'ti.i .it ..I Hi I i . ' ' u i - t . ' ti' a' ' I . ! If 'v ( id ri 1 , u i t t E I VI d - ! 1 t di . v e.-l- 'i f - ' I tel il- t I- R m l! 1 1 get-ftin- O H v - - moLIDA Keys to a cabin v. s i i ,,.1 i ' i -- l F.'vOv', y-- h v I I l EPARTHENT 'ITU kkklkA.lkkkAAAAAAk.Jm Self-conce- Vim A it SATURDAY IVINING Poor Seat is a poor seat to sit |