Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX-A
:‘O)/Lfk (:4[! Jf Y "Eove o
BEGIN HERE TODAY
Against the wishes of her
grandmother, aristocratic Mrs.
Willard Cameron, Dana West
brook marries Dr. Scott Stan
ley, struggling young physi
cian.
Before her marriage, rich
Ronald Moore had been in
love with her. Nancy, Dana's
half-sister, loves Ronald, but
hides her feeling behind a |
disdainful attitude. |
Paula Long's infatuation i
for Scott finally arouses
Dana’s jealousy. After a mis
‘understanding, she returns to
her grandmother’s. Mrs.
Cameron uses her influence to
make the separation perma
nent. and the break between
] young couple widens.
i onnie is a comforting
! d, but Dana remains dis- |
f solate. Finally, believing |
S tt loves Paula, Dana de- |
cides to divorce him.
Bcott believes Dana left him
‘because she was tired of being
spor. He becomes a partner
of the city’s most successful
physician, Dr. Osborne.
~ #Dr. Osborne is called when
Dana’s grandmother becomes
jill. Scott goes in the other
doctor’s place. After he leaves
‘Dana hears a low whistle
from the garden and she
_‘ hes there, expecting to find
jcott.
eg;-fitx months after the di
@;fll'co. Dana promises to mar
ry Ronnie. She breaks the
?N: to Nancy and is amazed
b Nancy's emotional out
jurst, but does not realize it
is prompted by Nancy's love
7 Ronnie.
N GO ON WITH THE STORY
st
{¢ CHAPTER XLII. !
Pana and Ronnie were to be
mled Friday. This was Wed
negday, and all the things Mrs.
Cameron thought should be done
in fonor of the occasion were in
progess of being accomplished.
lyen though Ronnie would be
in the house only that brief while
when he came to take Dana away
with him, the house must be
grgpmed and shining. As it always
ha@fbeen for the big events of its
anclent and honorable history.
Sarah, forgetting her three
sgore years and infirmities wax
:mz‘rlntending with an immense
ener and boundless enthusiasm.
Her two aids had taken limp
curtains down and put them back
snowy white and erisply rufiied.
The whine of the vacuum cleaner
had been heard in every room of
the big house. Soap and water
and. polishing fluids; dust rags
and- oiled mops, had come intc
their “own again.
Sarah, in spirit, was back in
the good old days, catching the
contagion of her mistress’ mood.
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' 234 COLLEGE AVENUE PHONE 74 ;
der the stimulus of becoming lm-‘
portant again.
The doorbell punctuated the
activities with exciting clangs.
And then some bick package from
a department store would arrive
to be deposited in her mistress’
room by Sarah. Under no circum
stances were the helpers to dis
cover that Miss Dana was in
volved in all this preparation.
Already, there had been surmis
ing. One of the aids had queried:
“Whut's goin’ to happen 'round
here? Never saw Bich going-ons
‘cept fer weddings.”
“rain’'t no weddin’ ’tall,” Sarah
lied glibly. “Guess folks kin clean
house good without havin’ a wed
din’. La, you younguns don’t
know what clenain® is. When I
wuz yo' age, you couldn’'t find a
spec o' dust wid a mhicrobe.”
“With ‘micrescope’ you means,"l
‘gaid Adella’s daughter, Ruby, who
was taking an “edication.”
Both Dana and Nancy had
moved quietly in the midst of
chaos’ Mrs. Cameron and Dana
were shopping. Nancy had plead
ed a headache and remained at
home. Aunt Ellen heard her mov
ing aimlessly about the house
that afternoon, chased from one
room to another by the . small
cleaning army.
“I'm going to the library and
read an hour or two,” Nancy
gaid. ,‘Maybe when I get back
I'll be able to recognize my own
room.”
«it js cluttered,” ~ Aunt Ellen
said sympathetically. “I'l get
Adella in your room right away.
Maybe it won't take two hours.
Your curtains are up and the
rugs are down.”
“Don’t worry about it Nancy
eaid. ‘There was a disconsolate
slump to her shoulders.
“jt's a long walk to the li
brary,” her aunt said. “If you'll
wait awhilc Agatha and Dana
will be back and Dana could drive
you there.”
“No thanks, I'd rather walk,"
Nancy said.
Her aunt stood at the window
fcllowing her niece with anxious
eves. Nancy, who always moved
so quickly, covering distance in
her graceful, swinging walk, was
setting out at a snail’'s pace. At
this rate, it would take her an
hour to reach the library. |
During the afternoon the phone
rang. Aunt Ellen answered. Ron
uie was calling Dana.
“Dana’'s down town, I think
ghe'll be in soon.”
“I'tl drop by on my way home,”
Ronnie said. |
Aunt Ellen suggested suddenly,‘
‘abashed by her own boldness:
“Nancy’'s at the library reading.
It's getting late. 1 wonder if
you'd mind going by for her.”
“Mighty glad to,” Ronnie said.
\ She had been awfully bold,
Aunt Ellen told herself. But then
it might not have been so awful
ly bold. Ronnie would be a mem
ber of the family in a few days.
Why shouldn’t she treat him like
one
Dana and Agatha might be late
in returning, and Nancy might
start walking home after dark
before she could send them for
her. Ronnie hadn't appeared to
mind, anyway. He had sounded
real pleased.
Nancy was sitting at a table
with- a magazine open before her,
when Ronnie walked in. He sat
down opposite her, inquiring, “Is
that the kind of literature you eat
up? And when did you start read
ing things upside down?”
Color mantled Nancy's face.
“Hello, Ronnie. I guess Dana
sent you to bring me home!”
“You're a bum guesser. 1
haven’t seen Dana since I lunched
with her at noon. I wunderstood
then she was going shopping, and
I suppose she's still at it.”
“Then how—?"
“Little bird told me.”
“Aunt Ellen!” Nanecy laughed a
little. *“And that's really a per
fect description.”
Ronnie helped Nancy into her
coat. It suddenly struck him that
Nancy was looking thin, and
there were shadows under her
!o,\'es. The thought depressed him,
l unaccountably.
{ They had almost reached home,
lwhen Ronnie asked abruptly:
| “You look mighty worried. Is
;lthem- something on your mind?”
He turned and met Nancy's
- mournful eyes. Something in their
‘expression shocked him. “Better
tell Brother Ronnie,”” Ronnie ad
ded with a cheerfulness he was
not feeling.
“ wish I could. Oh I wish I
could!” Nancy's volce was vehe
ment. “But if T did, you'd only
despise me.”
They were almost home. Im
pulsively, Ronnie pressed his foot
down and the car passed the
Cameron house in a burst of
speed,
“Shoot,” Ronnje said. “I haven’t
an idea in the world what you are
driving at. But it’'s only fair to
tell me now.” :
“Yes,” Nancy said, as though she
had arrived at a decision of some
kind. “I suppose it is. Well, you
asked for it, Ronnie. I hate to see
you and Dana marry, because
Dana doesn’t love you at all. And
I don't think you're really in love
with her either.”
The car swerved so violently
that for a moment it seemed they
were heading straight up the
Graham’s terraced lawn. But Ron
nie straightened the car out.
somehow, and a moment later
brought it to a secluded spot
around the corner,
“You haven’t an ounce of sense
in your head,” Ronnie said angri-
“You're the dumb one,” Nancy
flamed, *“You have a complex.
‘When you were a little boy you
were always picking up pencils
for girls. When you got back from
college you started binding up
their aching hearts. Now that
Dana’s heart is more broken than
anybody’s heart you know, you
start picking up the pieces and
putting them together again.”
Nancy stopped for breath.
When Ronnie didn’t speak, she
started again. “But you can’t do
it, Ronnie. It's a surgical job!
And there’s only one man who
could help Dana. She’s in love
with Scott and you know it.”
“Ronnie said, hoarsely: “You're
out of your head. I loved Dana
long before she ever married
Scott. And if she loved him so
much, why did she leave him?”
“You don't know anything
about love,” Nancy cried wildly.
“You wouldn’t know it if you saw
it under a microscope. You're So|
dumb, Ronnie. I never saw any-“
body as dumb!” |
Ronnie had a wild desire to
shake Nancy. Shake some sense
into that dark, curly head of hers.
And, without warning, he was
doing that very thing. Shaking
Nancy vigorously, And Nancy
iwas crying, crying desperately like
a little girl who had been slapped
and then put in a corner. Ronnie
had another impulse, more Kkind
ly—to do something, anything, to
check that lonely sobbing.
His arms went around Nancy.
Her head was on his shoulder and
Ronnie was whispering: “You
poor kid, I didn't mean to hurt
you, Nan.” -
He Kkissed Nancy's tremulous
lips. Nancy's sobs ceased. You
couldn’'t sob very well when you
were being kissed, when you were
kissing somebody back, wildly.
despairingly .
And then, Ronnie started the
car, bewildered ‘and troubled.
There had been something star
tlingly unbrother-like in the Kiss
he had given Nancy. Something
strangely confusing in her Kkiss
too. .
Funny little girl, Nancy. A
mighty appealing littel girl when
she wanted to he. He was wishe
ing, vehemently, that he hadn't
l kissed her.
That is, one minute he was
wishing it. And the next, he
wasn’t. But one thing he was def
initely certain about. He felt
ashamed and troubled,
(To Be Continued.)
STATE EXAMINATIONS
ATLANTA — (#) — State Sena
tor R. . Cannon of Clayton, pres!-
dent of the Georgia state board or
embalmers announced names of
applicants who have passed their
state board examinations.
The board has been examining ap
plicants for the past several days.
Cannon said those passing includ
ed J. A, Miller, Brunswick; N. M.
Lovein, jr., Columbus; T. L. Did
dens,” Valdosta; J, H. Hughes, Al+<
bany; George J. Scott, Valdosta
and Mabel , Bell, Savannah.
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 12, 1936