Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
BEGIN HERE TODAY
Toby Ryan, 19, works behind
the jewelry counter of a large
Manhattan department store
She posss for a photograph to
~be used in a store advertise
ment and Marty Hiatt, the pho
tographer, tells her she has a
“camera face.”
Discharged from the store due
tc the scheming of jealous
Maurine Ball, Toby has dif¥i
culty finding another job. Then |
she meets Marty Hiatt and he’ I
sends her to Ben Blake, mana
ger of a model agency. Toby I
registers at the agency, secures
work as a model,
At a style show where she '
is modeling she - meets Carcl
Marsh, rich and snobbish. Shu
also sees wealthy Tim Jamie- l
son who has been. trying for: .
some time to persuade her to
dine with him. Impetuously’
she agrees.
For a week Tim showers
her with attention and Toby
admits to herself that she is
falling in love with him. She
ie somewhat disturbed one
evening when, shortly after
their arrivai at the fashion
able Seville Club, Tim insists
on leaving. He tells Toby he *
is leaving next day for Mary- "
land, to be gone “a few -days.’. .
Later Toby learns that Carol l
Marsh is in Maryland attend- ~
ing a house party. . i
NOW GO ON WIiTH THE STORY
CHAPTER XX
Toby spent a sleepless sight and |
awoke with a headache. Harriet
was worrled obout her, but Har
riet had to leave for an early ap
pointment. Standing in the door
way, she looked back anxiously.
“You're sure there isn't any
thing you want?” shé asked. “Any
thing 1 can get for you?” :
“No,”t Toby said. “I'm going to[
pbe all right. 1 °'think 1 feel better
glready.” i < I
“She didn’t, but she wanted to
Y, slone. After the door had clos—l
ed on the other girl, Toby pressed !
her head against the pillow and
closed her eyes. If she could sleep,
she thought, the pain in her head
might stop.
But, before she kuew it, she was
again going over the arguments |
she had repeated so often to her-.
self the night before. There was
no reason—none at all—to suspect
that, just because Tim had gone.to
Maryland, he was at the house
party Carol Marsh was attending.’
Why, Maryland was a whole state,
There were hundreds of towns in
Maryland. It was merely a coin
cidence that Carol was there, too. |
A surpriging coincidence—but how
many times had she heard that
truth is stranger than fiction?
‘lf Tim would ‘only write or tele
phone—
She lay very still, thinking that
perhaps, if she did that, by some
magic the telephong across the,
room night ring, She wag so still
it seemed she'cbuld heéar her heart
beat. But the tetephone did not
ring.
Then the scene in the Seville
Club, that last night she and Tim
‘had spent together., came back—so
vividly Toby might have been see
ing it all again. Tim's sudden in
sistence that they should leave,
rushing her away almost before
she knew what she was about. And
the memory ,of Carol, cool and
beautiful in her silver gown, sit
ting at that table not a dozen feet
away.
. Had Carol and her friends just
arrived? Was that why Tim was
in such a hurry to go somewhere
"LAND SAKES, ELMER — 1
CRISP!"
; 9’
QU 7 d;)
i\
9
RS
R
THERE’S not a person in
your family who won’t re
mark about it: Kellogg’s
Wheat Krispies have some
thing that cannot be found
g in any other ready-to-eat
cereal. , :
Just enough rieeis blended . .
with the nourishment and
flavor of whole wheat to give
Wheat Krispies a new good
ness , . . a marvelous crisp
ness, They actually stay
crunchy in milk or cream.
Try them. Buy a large, eco
nomical package from your
grocer. Enjoy Wheat Kris
pies often. Made by Kellogg
in Battle Creek.
=
/\:\ /
| \K‘va’zEAT /
\ ISPIES )&
\ W‘t 1
A Aty ‘SE\ .'
|
| BLENDED for
I CRISPNESS
else? The thought held infinite
torture and Toby tortured he’rfsell’
a 8 women is love, before her, have
done, §
Tim had explained, of course,
and she had believed. Oh, she
had wanted to believe him! She
wanted to believe him now, but
why didn’t she hear from him?
At last, tired by the unanswered |
and unanswerable arguments, To- I
by slept. q
| e i
‘ When Harriet returned in the |
la_ftemoan she found her room- |
mate sitting by the window, mend
ling a blouse. 1
1. Why,. . Toby,” Harrlet sald.“
“That's my blouse. You shouldn't |
bé doing that!” |
“Oh I saw it lying there and |
thought 1 might as well be work- |
1 Ing "4t ‘sométhing. It's just flbnul’
4 finished.” . |
She held up the blouse for in- |
spection Toby’s stitches were neat I
and tiny. i
“Hh,” Harriet sald. “Better |
than I could do. Is the headache !
gone?” ]
Toby nodded. ‘l'm feeling flne%
now.” she saia. She didn’t look as |
though she were feeling fine, by
any means, but Harriet was too
| cancerned .with. her own affairs to
i notice. “Clyde’s coming tonight,”
1 éhe “exclaimed jubilantly. “I found
a detter from him when I came in. |
He's going to get in town about |
15 ‘ocloek and he's coming to take
me to dinner. [ don’t know wheth
j €1 to wear my green dress or that
new black one—" ‘
“Wenr the black one,” Toby ad
vised. It makes you look as|
though you'd just stepped off u!
ritzy mogazine cover.” t
“All right, if you say so. Llsten.[
Toby, 1 wish you'd come with us! |
Clyde knows a lot of men. I know |
[H("d'be glad to call one of them |
to go along.” :
I “No,” Toby said hastily. “Some |
other time, maybe, but not to-|
night™ ! l
“But, honestly, T think it would |
do you good. You've been in the[
house so much lately.” i
“I just don’t feel like it, Har
riet. I'd rather not.”
“Well—maybe. you'll change your |
Fmind later,” Harriet suggested.
She eyed her roommate uncertains
ly. Something was the matter
with- Toby; she hadn’t been a bit
like herself lately. Harriet sus- '*
perted it had something to do with
Tim Jamieson. He'd given Toby
such a rush for a while. Now he
was gone and Toby didn't seem to
want to talk about where he was
or when he'd be back. All she had
said was that he was out of town.
Harriet was inclined to hope he
was, and that he would stay there.
Apyone who made Toby look 80 |
migerable was good riddance! ‘
It was half an hour later that |
the telephone rang. Harriet an-|
swered and then, lowering the in
| ¥thunfeht! put a hand over the re \
ceiver. “It's for you, Toby,” she
said
“For me?’ The words were the
tarest eclio of the song in Toby's |
bearts Tim was calling at last!‘
He was home again and all herl
silly worries and fears had been
for notring. Oh, she had known
it. She had known it all along!
She took the telephone and sald,
trying to keep her voice as steady
as possible, “Hello—"
17 Bat' it was not Tim who answer
ed. For an instant Toby didn't un
derstand the voice on the wire. She
only knew it wasn't Tim's voice.
There was a pause, and then she
heard herself speaking. She said,
trying to stifle her disappointment,
“Oh, Bill—how are you?”
It was odd that she hadn't rec
ognized Bill Brandt's voice. Only
she had been so sure—so very sure
it would be Tim. Toby suddenly
realized how long it had been slnce'
she had seen Blill. Almost twol
weeks, except for a brief encounter
on the street. Until lately she'd
seen Bill two and three timeg each
week,
| He said, “Oh, I'm getting along
all right. How’s America's most
popular advertising model?”
Toby laughed., Something about
jthe way Bill said things almost al
|ways made you want to laugh. "I.
{really don't know, Bill,” she said.
|“ls she an acquaintance of yourn?"{
+ -“U'll gay she is. Toby Ryan, her
! name is. Skinny little thing, about
|as big as a minute, Mayhe you've
heard of her?”
“Never, Toby wag emphatic. “Bue
1f 1 ever do see her, I'll remember
|she's a friend of yours.”
l “That's right. Glve her a break.
She deserves it. And, by the way,
thow about giving me one? 1
haven't seen you in a coon's age.
{Don’'t you think it's about time we‘
jwent down to the old cafeteria
} where they have the corned beetl
jand cabbage? Or, if you'd like
}something fancier. I might even |
|be able to manage that. Not too
{fancy, of course—" l
Toby’'s voice was regretful. “I'd
jlike to Bill—but I'm afraid I can't!
| tonight.” |
“Some other boy friend ahead of|
me, huh? You're certainly getdng|
to be a popular girl, Toby.” 1
“I really do want to see you, Bill,
IC&H me again, won't you?” |
! “Well, from where I'm sitting, it
looks very much ag though I would.!
And I hope Y have better luck. So
long, Toby.” 1
et |
She put down the telephone. Har.
riet, busily manicuring her nails
looked up. “Was that the Bill you
introduced me to?” ghe asked. “The
one we met on the street that
day?”
“Yes, Bill Brandt.” .
“Hm. Nice sort of fellow, 1
thought, If it wasn’'t for Clyde |
might try to give vou a little com
petition.”
“Bill's one of the nicest people
in the world,” Toby assured her.
“Hm.” There may have been an
answer on the tip of Harriet's ton
: but if there was, ghe kept It
to herself. . :
Clyde Sabin telephoned ‘later and
then arrived at the apartment. He
Toby had expected him to be. In
B LAURA LOU BROOKMAN
@ A i s ©
the first place, he was older—well|
’lmo the 30's, surely. From Toby'sl
19 that seemed middle-age. Har- |
riet wag 22. l
Sabin was tall and broad-shoul
dered and very well tailored. Not
at all handsome, but rather nice
{looking. And he certainly tried to
'be pleasant. Toby thought perhaps
|he tried a little too hard. Maybe
ithat was the reason she didn’t teell
jat ease with him. She couldn't
{think of any other reason.
| Sabin repeated Harriet's invita
tion for Toby to Join them for the
evening, “Let me call up Tom
| Gargide,” he said. “I know he'd
|be glad to come along. Tom's a
Jnice fellow, too. You'll like him—"
| But Toby made it plain that she |
ipreferrad to stay in, and when the|
| others saw she meant it they gavef
’up their urging,
‘ They left finally and Toby went]
ito the window and looked out.|
| Dusk had settled over the street; in‘
half an hour it would be dark. Al-!
|ready “Manhattan's electrical splen
fidor wag in evidence, though Toby
]could not see it. Nearby buildings, |
| bleak, unlighted, closed in about
| her. They assumed grotesque,
' menacing outlines.
Toby turned her back on them
and walked from the window.
Downstairs a radlo had begun to
play a tune she had often danced
|with Tim. The music was being
'broadcast from some place where
Ilher‘e was galety and laughter, soft|
'lights, couples dancing as she and
Tim had danced.
A suden sense of loneliness
swept over her. Why had she in
)slsted on remaining at home to-h
‘night? Why hadn't she gone out|
jwith Harriet and Clyde Sabin? Orl
with Bill? !
[ Yet she knew, even as she asked
‘the question, why she had not'
‘gone, She was walting to hear
from Tim, I
(To be continued.) |
; e }
V
| ARMY ORDERS
| WASHINGTON,~— () — Army
lorders Wednesday included:
. Majors:
Frank H. Sharpless, Infantry,
[SI. Louis, Mo., to Fort Moultrie, |
8.0
‘[ James Mac Kay, F. D, Seattle,!
Wash.,, to Atlanta, QGa. |
} Clinton E. Fenters, Infantry, !
Fort Benning, Ga. to Panama
!Canal department.
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Tk g f eP v o o Enlertainments o VVeck &
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SR N . OLUMBI :
A NETWORK
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
New Drug for Use
After Operations
[ Ope 7o g
hd dby Held
i eported by Heldt
bl —
- By HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE
Associated Press Science Editor
ST. LOUIS, — () — A drug
which works directly on the mind
to relieve paln after surgical op
erations, and which he said rids
surgery completely of the need for
the habit-forming morphine and
opium commonly used, was ree
ported to the American Psychia
tric Association here t()duy‘ by
Thomas J. Heldt, M. D, of/ the
Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit.
The drug is a recently devel
oped hypnotic. Under the name
of “X,” Dr. Heldt ® said, it was
used in 100 major operations, Only
he and one physician knew what
it was. Nurses and patients sup
posed it was something like mors
phine.
Its results were compared with
100 other major operations using
morphine and opium. It worked
more effectively to still pain than
the habit-forming drugs.
Its success is based on the
principle that pain is partly psy
chic, sometimes entirely so, as
shown when under excitement
women saving their children, or
soldiers in battle feel no pain,
The purpose of the Ford pain
treatment is to avoid excitement,
but to create by aid of the new
drug a state of mind under which
pain is not keen. This experiment
grew out of experience well known
to medical men, in which post
foperative pain has been relieved,
apd sometimes even the amount
of anesthetic greatly reduced by
“conditioning” the patient in ad
vance by talks with his physician
or surgeon.
Ten minutes of the right pre
paratory talk, Dr. Held said, “will
d> more to allay pain than any
dose of morphine, The qualified
surgeon may even be able to do
the assignment in five minutes.”
George H. Rarey, Infantry, Fort
Benning, Ga., to Baltimore, Md.
Percy E. Hunt, Infantry, Ath
ens, Ga., to Hawaiian department.
John W. Childs, Infantry, Fort
Screven, Ga., to Hawalian depart
ment.
Aloysius E. O'Flaherty, jr., In
fantry, Fort Benning, Ga. to Ha
'waiian department.
Amateur Prophet on
b .
- Weather Predicts
Summer as of 1918
PR AR RET o O b SRR e S e
B —————————EEE
By W. M. PEPPER, JR.
Associated Press Staff Writer.
ATLANTA, Ga.—(/f)—Encour
aged by his record as a long dis
| tance prophet of Georgia weather,
R. D. Paschlal gazed at intri
cate charts today and declared
the nation at large may expect a
repetition of 1918 conditions this
summer.
Local records of the coming
season, said the amateur fore
caster, who 'is an employe of the
istate income tax department,
should be “very similar” to those
}of 18 years ago.
. Weather records show about
normal temperatures for the 1918
period with July a little cool and
August a little warm. Rainfall
weas slightly below normal.
With a system all his own, de
vised during '29 years of study.
Paschall uses: the moon for his
calculations but says its phases
are only a part of the factors to
be considered.
~ The moon, he contends, causes
’ tides in the atmosphere like those
in the sea, with even more deli
cate control. These tides, he rea
[sons, create pressure areas and
currents which, in turn, control
‘ the weather.
} His successful prediction of the
~disastrous ice storm that gripped
Atlanta during the Christmas sea
son first brought his work teo
public attention,
~ His initial prediction of nation
- wide weather today was confined
to the brief, general comparison
with 1918 conditions, the major
portion of the forecast being for
local consumption.
“As to the coming summer,”
his local prediction began, “those
for papers interested may rest
assured it will not be very hot.”
New Way to Hold
False Teeth in Place
Do false teeth annoy you by drop
ping or slipping? Just sprinkle a
little Fasteeth on your plates. This
new fine powder holds teeth firm
and comfortable, No gummy, pas
ty taste or feeling. Sweetens breath.
Get Fasteeth from your druggist.
Three sizes~—Advt.
Clemson Harmonie
| n H rs
- To Broadcast Here
i
Saturday May 16th
} Clemson College students will
{make their debut over radio sta
[tion WTFI Saturday May 16 from
2:30 tg 3 o'clock through their
musical representatives, “The Har
monizers”, four good-looking young
i men with a guitar,
| Livingston Wever, Richard Mil
{ ler, Walter Nelson, jr., and Ted
|Mc(‘,ully are the boys, The (first
ilhl'm- are from Savannah while Me
[ Cully resides at St. Augustine,
{Fla
| Wever is g junior in chemical
fienginem'ing and is 22 yearg old.
| Miller is a freshman in chemical
hngineering and js 18 years. He
?sings baritone while Wever sings
, tenor. Nelson is a freshmah in
| the mechanical engineering scincol,
lis 20 years old and sings bhass.
| McCully is an architectural engl
| neer, 20 years old and ig the
l guitarist.
| The boys have a most unusual
and Interesting program consist
ilng of interpretations and vocal
| patter. Their program in part s
tas follows: Theme, “The Four Of
:Is original composition; “Sweet
1 Sue,” “WaHoo”, “Geody-Goody,”
| “Lights Out”, “Rhythm in Our
gNursery Rhymes” and the greatest
iot all, “Mamma Don’t Allow No
iMusic Played in Here."”
Also on the program is Walter
Nelson, jr., in piano interpreta
tions of Little Jack Liit's, Eddie
| Duchin, Fatgy Waller, Duke Elling
| ton and others.
E The boys offer, too, a . Tango
{ Melody using no musical instru
{ ments except the guitar. The other
effects being obtained from their
‘own voices. Be sure and hear the
{bnys from Clemson college Satur
! day May 16 from 2:30 to 3 p. m.
—The time for filing State and
County Tax Returns Has Been
Extended to May 10th, 1936. All
Persons Between the Ages of 21
and 60 Years Old Are Liabie for
State and County Taxes., Don't
Delay as It Will Mean Extra
Expense and Cost to You.
W. M. BRYANT
TAG RECEIVER
CLARKE COUNTY, GA.
’ BIG SPENDING JOB |
WASHINGTON, Ga.—(P)—Mrs,
‘ Beyce Ficklen, jr., of Washington,
Ga., who has been named to the
I aitonal Democratic commlttee's‘
staff, once handled a state job
mvolving spending of more thanl
$1,000,000 a year.
Mrs. Ficklen, long pro_minent
in Georgia civic affairs, was
named first secretary of the State
Board of Control which operates
,the state’'s eleemosynary institu
| tions. The board was created as
| a part of the state government's
reorganization, under Jeadership
‘of Senator Richard B. Russell,
jr., former speaker of the state
house of representatives, and la
l ter governor of Georgia. :
As secretary of the board it was
IMrs. Ficklen’s job to keep up with
o o = T
lfyou feel tired, &(e b
QLR OGBSI e
andoutof sorts SECHN/
There is usually a definite reason for such complaints . .. so,
now let’s reason sensibly.
Don’t try to get well in a day...this is asking too much of
Nature. Remember, she has certain natural processes that
Jjust cannot be hurried.
But there is a certain scientific way you can assist by start
ing those digestive juices in the stomach to flowing more
freely and at the same time supply a balanced mineral
deficiency the body needs.
Therefore, if you are pale, tired, lack a keen appetite, have
lost weight and feel rundown. ..a frequent sign that your
blood-cells are weak, with a tendency towards anemia—then
do try in the simple, easy way so many millions approve—
by starting a course of S.S.S. Blood Tonic.
Much more could be said——a trial will thoroughly convince
you that this way, in the absence of any organic trouble, will
start you on the road to feeling like yourself again. @ s.s.s. co.
5 ? . % '] f i I,‘
: iy = 2 I >
BS i S
S"Vlm? A Lahio) V(o
THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1938 ¥
the widespread operaftions of thea
Viorious eleemosynary institutions,
take general supervisions oves
purckases of supplies and keep the
board advised of operations at the
various institutions.
Eases Headache
.
In 3 Minutes
also neuralgia, muscular aches
and pains, toothache, earache,
periodical and other pains due
to inorganic causes. " No nars
otics. 10c and 25¢ packagess