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Fitchburg Sentinel from Fitchburg, Massachusetts • Page 4

Location:
Fitchburg, Massachusetts
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4
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JENTiNEi, WiWttflOAY, -tv A worOi-whDe flM tmarimt ewiy? tor wfcM tariMM win be tack to normal u4 Bvtan WOMEN'S INTERESTS si ft wlMi MM devtbf ifMrtful tf staff tnMlmt 009 it Warwick. Barbara Alton. CLOVES AND MTTTKNS LEAD FALI will be interesting and the slims, and with the contrasts and mxkraU happy nuddle-of- to amusing accessories this fall Couturiers making tiem in eveiy TOte worn. A TRANSIENT CAMP at Wakefeld; he realizes doubtless i As to the class of men here sev- that he ic well off under present! eral are college-bred. One man conditions.

i conies a large western city. i i The men work six hours a day, i He had at one time $100,000. It was is largely a repository for relics has preswit have but two In our sys the week, for their I swept away as were so many for- undoubtedly have a high as an agency in the fprnutioo of pub- purpose of the transient campa to take unemployed ami fabric to match' He taste with which the 11 be-: The old idea that an art museum off the road and give them work. A.I one I i i I Ameriac-n de- pretty well dissipated. It IB showed watchinc woM and I now quite racognind that Warwick.

pay Caur-el i a'! of her sport? 1 one of the proper functions of such; i fa former there are about 275, clothe 1 Miitf be quite Another man bad $10,000 i i nmseni an LnslituHon is to present for pub- mcn the latter, which wni only; It is the inteiilion of the Pacilic cu.jst. This was in 1 wrtty" be spem ior nocessi- say no more. mt-ps of the work of contemporary Later on tt is expected that Zjd will i Some of them spend some fatal year for most of though It waa through no fault of his own. What brought him there might easily be the spirit of greed that actuated themselves. I can imagine tunes, such case.

The man who intends in to keep hia secret shows good sense. How do they use their money? equipment in his restaurant on the As we were about to leave the I camp our guitfc conducted to was One fc in Wakefield, one in i the fifth day they rewure probably craftsmen and workers the in- be employed in Warwick and that it fi Cn-eds dus'ria! arts. These have a natural, camps will also be eatabhshed day Ji i' 1 he prized relics of the other places. or i ones for wckiai! parties nndi Unuous, tlere is for diversion. Friday and Satur- evenings trucks go to Orange Athol Inking men who wish to no given point camp at Warwick.

It is located As our young guide to us, This man is carefully hoarding his small ejrnmgs. When he has a Ftake of $200 he plans to return to him the like. THt VOKLD BEATS A PATH it'liiM Observer Dispatch) it stops or ceases to com-, about three miles from the village, i "They would come to hate the camp; There must be many an interesting 1 ntand attention as art. furniture ii' Work will be on the state forest I not necessarily entitled to greater reservation which I because it 15 antique-. The tract of land.

covers a vast pottery of the present day niay con- unless they could get away now and then." when the time comes story those workers. I recall one other case our guide mentioned, that of a man who has "len are working at present to start back, a man is missing. He' a good trade. He goes now and The Irr.ger we l.vc ard the more Ul S15cl mens quite as worthy of on the barracks, The infirmary and may have succumbed to the lure then to his home town. No one aturc the beauty worship as some of the treas- recreation hail ar? in process the road; he may have taken too there has any idea where he is be- have have We know hum it surprises U5 Fnr a as we can folk 1 been annoyed oecausc the neighbor's baby cried.

i contortions. Families in upper and lower flats have been at because) the baby cried and familjes have been broken up for the same reason. But now from Ontario, Can, comes the report thai cars are lined ured museum pieces-three thousand bujldmg. Afterward they will clear (much liquor. Among so many there The stream pncs on end- Paths (so much needed fighting curTentj forest fires) through the freaklsh iwlrls and troubled! should have interpolated a It is all worthy of statement.

of the a that there are Stu Jour- up outside the Dionne home while sit ard listen for the cry- the bu.lt to the eta. to give! MAE WEST TO BLAME? "Come on up and see me some time" is" a national slogan which has cost and will cost Hollywood i hundreds lt ln Worcester, Springfield, Boston and Lawrence where the unemployed may remain for a night or two. Trucks meet men here and convey them to Wakeheld or Warwick. I asked how long the men stay must be a few who cannot resist the craving for drink. There is little or no trouble in the camp.

guide, a clean, tween times. "When business is better and I can get my regular work," said he, "I shall go home. This experience will remain unknown by my fellow wholesome young man of perhaps I citizens." This man's pride will be 25 ur so, was alone with the men on a recent Sunday afternoon. All was quiet. "If," said he, "you put men on their honor, all will go wel 1 if they know they are being watched, they 1 this world.

saved. I think he is wise. It is no disgrace to seek work in a transient camp. It is, indeed, a most creditable thing to do, but there are many foolish persons in remain a few weeks and then resent it and trouble ensues." go in search of work elsewhere. Sound psychology, this! It applies more room for and from sapient Bl Cunningham for the everywhere the curious are listening Sunday osti upsct for the crying of ihe babies.

pi cture applecart. This may have It is a queer world, indeed, when other rottcn fruitj but nonc quintuplets in a far place can cause j-, the building of a new road and make a mecca for tourists. Perhaps these quintuplets can do more. Mayhap Canada can build another to just the glamor which Mae gave it. When young children began to repeat with a sinful wink "Cmon up an' see me some time" Such persons would point their finger at a man who had been needed, forced to accept work of this nature cfij vhe mess room where (upper was about to be served.

Beside each plate was a bowl of appetizing, thick, pea soup with MISSILE FOUND LIVING IfLAKK (Falmouth Enterprise) Did you ever throw stonss? Did you ever throw stones at the terns that dart back and forth over the water at the beach? And did you ever feel that to hit one of them was well nigh impossible, and so keep on throwing because It good sport and not likely to hurt the birds? We did. impossible happened. Someone threw a stone and killed a tern. or a fruit drink, and lor layer cake with mocha fillings. To maJu the (for six people) you'll need a whole loaf of bread.

Take three large, ripe, skinned tomatoes, sliced thin; three hard cooked eggs, sliced, six slices cooked bacon, crisp; 1 cup olives, cut from stones; thick mayonnaise; lettuce. Slice the bread thin, trim off the rrusts and toast slices until sandwiches with the foast and other ingredients arranged in at the bird; he didn't even see It. times. The drink was to cocoa or iced tea, I believe. I have spoken of tbe ways provided for ministering to physical, social, recreational needs of the workers.

There remains the religious need. On Sundays trucks transport the men to the nearest Roman Catholic or Protestant church, according to their preference. Tliis seems the part of wisdom rather than to provide a chaplain. In this camp no man over 60 years of age is accepted. For older men a camp is projected where work will be lighter.

There will alsd be camps especially for young men. A worthwhile experiment, the transient camp! Heaven speed the day when it will be no longer moored on th- Herring river, and as let the stone go a tern flashed across, from out of nowhere, it seemed, and caught the stone full in the head. The bird fluttered to. the water, dead, a pitiful handful of beauty, with its orange bill, black head and Y- Tr Tl rv picks to hold the sandwiches to- BARBARA ALLEN. CLARK GABLE VS.

KING COTTON A cotton farmer's life not a happy one. If it isn't the boll weevil, it's Clark Gable neath the tent. After a while the is in a regular hospital bed--the Ihe flexibility of body and mind neighborhood became very qtiiet, kind we call a gatch. She has-which is the hallmark of the and it has remained so for 11 days, named her baby Elaine, and we i healthy, intelligent person At pres- Bellowing radios have been cut bring her out for her to see each ent, when new ideas and practices horrified parents, disgusted precep- to the recovery i Cotton, who has been ml.ng since off. When a street peddler comes I day.

She is very pleased with it. into the neighborhood some one! Soon we can let her take her in her goes out and cautions him not to arms. Her husband comes every yell so much phoiit his bananas and jpjrruieu yareum, aisgusiea precep- i onions, wnen trucK drivers nonK pv She was in a railroad or a bus line can be opened and saddened pnests ked shortly after the Civil war. I thcir horns hc policemn the but to the Dionne home. Mayhap whcre the youn2sters of today are The Daily News-Record, organ ncllli i them snmp infnrmat ion The background village itself wul become busy and geU ing this kind of education in sin.

I th? dr trade, alarmed be- a out conduct on hospital hedeo and a prosperous because of the tounst trade. Perhaps there will bo new stores and a new even an amplifier, so more folks can hear the babies cry. And all this time the babies do not know the world-wide commo- ner. They are very hap- in a malnourished but she is picking is surrounded by fence. Above it are arising almost daily, such resiliency is particularly Herald.

There was only one answer. So, cause Clark doesn't wear any un- rugs h.ivo been IxMten out for! hang clothes lines from the tene- 1 1 1 i 4 1 1 TM. nel since guilt has to be personalized, a i dor hotel, and natlon wl dnve is on against the I his i dorsnirt. Every time he removes 1) children, i In the next enclosure is 0 ou Ler shlrt the movies it by the heat, to- space for the automobiles sinful Mae West. It matters not that shockingly apparent that he has no thoir others hu'-h them.

and. iay, Th? doctors, bark the'r in her own daily life she is said to 1 an exemplary woman, one of two not i commo- actresses at HoUywood who never tion they have cr.uscd. They do take a tkjnk) onc wWl whose name not know what a world i i nor do thov knnw that even older regulai communicant at a HoHy folks are jupt babic-s of more years church whosp al wood church whose rector has'lately Neither do they know that the fa- to)d Qie world what a mous about building a better mousetrap has to be revised for the world "certainly beats a path to the door of quintuplets nice person It matters not, either, that perspicacious followers oi uie films see the sick woman in the atitomrbilcs out very quietly. The i children of the neichborhood have in tor.t is Mrs all down to vacant lot at other. This frets the trade, which Is fearful of the beginning of a one- 1 The- woman shirtfadamongAmeriacnmal.es.

Warparet Borzoi. 22, of 608 Dtimoit Ralph avenue and Union street, Secretary of Agriculture. Wallace avenue. i Her blocks awav fn.m tho yard in had better take this matter up with Bcrsei, a salesman, the movie moguls richt away. -The been out of woik- for months.

cinema business in the South will May 29 hp broucht hrr in the hos- World-Tclcpram. iab a blpck-hancd woman has On Cor her life for 11 N. Y. in Mae West primarily a satirist. go to pieces in a hurry if pital, a stop wearing.undershirts and farm- child ers sell that much less cotton nisi Clark Gable is miruitf: later a i a sturdy nirl wcieh- TIIE ART STREAM On the schedule for the coming winter at the Metropolitan Museum: ca ted folk see is an exhibition -of the modern in- ed actress, but the sophisticates are dustrial art oi the United few There have already been a number! 1 TM ons llttlc of exhibits of this character, but it is ni mac i i i i i i a a i i a 1 T.

i since she makes sardonic sport of "is audjcnce for the sake fovrro the persimple animalism of human I of a nud est Is dlls a 1 1 10 males, Tliat may be what sophist i- TM 1 "TM Ur economic chnos. i i I it i on Ber- FALMOL'TII'S NEW 1's enlrrnnsps DEATH ON HIGHWAYS As I travel from place 1o place 1 find along the streets the crushed bodies of rabbits, squirrels, skunks, turtles, frogs and even cats. Often I find them badly injured but alive and suffering. These are tile victims of motorists who are as cruel as the cnielest of hit and run drivers. This slaughter seems more prevalent at this time of year than at any other.

Many of the birds are struck because of the fact that they are fledglings and not quite 5ure of their wings. Not long ago. I saw a man speed down the street, strike a younp robin and when the pearl-gray wings. He didn't throw any more stones that afternoon. JOHNNIE AND JIMMIE The twins, Johnny and Jimmie, who are being put through the wringer the Normal Child Development Clinic of the Medical Center in New York, are attracting almost as much attention as the Canadian quintuplets.

As near as I can make out, Johnnie is being raised right and scientific, and Jim- Topsy. Their father says that Johnny is a little gentleman and Jimmie a little mug. "Johnny is a little larger, more at ease with strangers, more nervy and resourceful Jimmie is a grabber, noisier, more loving, full of rough and aelf-preaerving 'y is. prob- has fis to whether bird was dead or abhr a unsqMc venture, the Fal- a nc. The bird was not dead and have been left to sufrrr tor --New Ynrk Post.

A STORY OF NE1GHBORLP.ESS On the street posts ne sipns boannTM the lepend "Quiet ihn- thu-lrlv neigRDornooa of A to ft Her wocdjnrss persisted, howpvr mtvi'h Inst.nu'e A croup nf a Interpreter in Marsn- Stvrn i i were' sachuseUs citizens have purchased field Main fivon decided that fresh the a i (slates of the lat" r.ir vas i Frank H. find M. ard '-v ''ic weak to he nrwi-'l hase ctonfed a non-profit-making our scnoois for youth, ides- unusual iing of nor- uj WL a snd th'e stim- One unit of the coming show will i urges, are being' waiter RadToTsquawk. "street ped- had to h.iv'e 'fresh air'so wo ulntion of thr Tn these Include six complete interiors de-1 stimulated. Idlers shout incoheiently tho ihar.ce enjojable and sUengthening different-didiittJL'ti.

generation of-t-skntrnrr-is-a-TToptrhrrpamrmr i'' H-rwrrTr -mtnutrs ru'fwpon-w-crnphasrotr others will display parts rooms lrmtator3 of tlle sta Mae "West; But one afternoon three nurses', we got her avantied in the tent the I lectures and cuiuexenccs on matters and various of textiles to of a sort, moved a hospital bed out in the nek'hhorhood became quieter than 11 of current intrrest have been ar- glass, and furniture The not a PP roved moralists, repre-j backyard of the Brooklyn Women's. havo knov.n it before. Prtplp ranced. lectures, which will work of many contemporary de-i atives tbfee great faiths, Hospital, at 1395 Eastern Parkway those apartment houses comr! becm at and continue signers will be assembled in a way that will furnish enlightening com- A n-l a i i I I I I i 3 I ic, Protestant and Jewish, are i They erected a brovm campers tent' here every morning and bring Saturdays Sundays throughout boycott to clamp a above the bed. Presently two doc- flowers.

Thry ask for reports on August. a ro open to the public with- ri Rid censorship upon the of the modem architects, I Loweil Courier-Citizen, decorators and designers are "Modernistic" ia their ideas, and it goes without saying that the views of the extremsts will be liberally rcpre- in the Metropolitan show 1 But there will surely be as generous a display pf conservative de- A TWO-WAY ANSWER (Montreal Star) Parent--Do you find that Jack works hard? likea doing nothing better. tors walked into the backyard boar- her conditions all during the day. ing a stretcher containing a black- And they tell us that they arc try- haired woman. The hospital's back- "IB to keen tilings quiet.

Well, they out charge The institute is nition of the fact that while life yard is fringed with' apartment' have. It is a hospital street, but I may not necessarily begin at 40 it houses and tenements, and from i have never seen a hospital should ocntinue, joyously and ad- their windows the tenants of these i street so quiet. venturously, after that milestone is houses watched the scene in the "Mrs. Berber is resting well. She passed.

This does not mean that hospital's backyard. is going to Ret well, and the tent (older people should try to behave They watched as the saved her lif- We pull her out their sons and daughters, but woman was placed in the bed be- into the sun and let her rest She' that thpy should endeavor to retain NO FVRRINERS FOR HER! (Pathfinder) alienist to examine your son? Mother--No, sir An American doctor is good enough for me. POULTRY CROP A FAILURE Here is a story one wife brought -hnnt from "chatter club: "Is your mother," inquired a member wanting to be nice to a shy young visitor from the open spaces, "raising any poultry this year' replied the s. y. chickens scratches 'em all up.

"The FAVOBTTE ENJOYMENT (Van Hem) Teacher--Now, who can tell me the rarne of the place where all good children will go? Class in cinema. hi-man urges cautions." It may be so, and yet nothing Is proved as to the systems of upbringing. Don't forget that Johnnie and Jimmie. child- rearing fTuinea pigs, are also human beings. If the treatments were reversed, Johnnie mipht still be the gentleman and Jimmie the mug.

Even as it is, when the youngsters grow Jimmie may be the better" of the two. They may even be, at maturity, as alike as two peas. A friend of mine said he thought this laboratory experiment of which Johnnie and Junmie were the subjects was prossly unfair. "To Jimmie?" I asked. "Of was the reply; "he's -being neglected, so to speak, while Johnnie has the advantage of all the latest doodads in child-rearing." "Have you ever thpucht," I asked, "that Johnnie mipht bp the victim of the injustice?" He thought a moment.

"You may be right, at that," he in the New Bedford Standard-Times. gether. Garnish the tops with crisp inside leaves of lettuce and tew of sliced olives. And now for the dessert Use a white or chocolate cake with the following mixture as Icing and filling: Cream two tablespoons of butter. Work into it one cup powdered sugar and two tablespoons of clear, strong coffee.

Beat until the mixture is creamy and spread it at once on cake. You may, if you wish, add a sprinkling of nuts or finely chopped crystallized fruits. A MATTBt OF SHOE AND FOOT (Advance) Mother--No, Jimmie, for third time I tell you that you cannot have any more dessert. Jimmie--All right; but I don't HlWHTjBtTTfBfe ihe wea tnat always changing your mind. Pinking are a great trick for the home dressmaker.

They ore used to cut seams so 'that they won't- fray. You can make the inside of a dress look as if it had just come from Paris by trimming all the seams neatly with those scissors-, and 'then pressing them carefully. It's the easiest way to finish a seam and its satisfactory for anything that doesn't need washing a Jot or that isn't transparent. They're a bit expensive, but -they are worth British textile manufacturers are attempting to perfect a cotton col- lar which will be so cheap that a man can afford to one a day and throw it away when he has worn it once. the THE TREE I stood still and a tree amid wood.

Knowing the truth of things unseen before; Of Daphne and the laurel bouph And that god-feas Ing couple old That (frew elm-oak amid the wpld 'Twas not until the (tods had been Kindly and brought within Unto the hearth of their heart's home That might do this wonder thing: I have been a tree amid the wood The easier it is to prepare it the more popular a summer meal Te. Not only the housewife appreciates menus that are easy of prep- aralkm--Liil the family-is. to sense the simplicity of tempting dishes and give whole-hearted approval. Among those really easy summer meals, double-decker sandwiches as a main dish come in especially handy. Cold sliced meat or eggs, salad foods like lettuce, tomatoes, cucumbers and mayonnaise and jams and jellies, all lend themselves to this idea.

A simple, easy and appetizing menu, with the main course a club sandwich, comprises ripe olive, club sandwich, cucumber sticks, potato Iced tea with mint and lemon, --Ezra Pound. THE SOUND OF THE TREES Why do we wish to bear Forever the noise of 'heM than another noise suffer them by the day Till we Icne all measure of And fixity in our Joys, And acquire a listening air They are that that talksr of going But never away; And thai Ulk3 no lets for knowing. As it (frowj wiser and older. That now It means to stay. My feet tug at the floor And my head sways to my ahouldef Sometimes when I watch trees swajv From the window or the door.

I shall set forth for somewhere. I shall make the reckless choice Some day when they are In Voice And tosstnff so ai to scare The white cloudi over them on. I stmll mwe less to say, But I shall be gone. --Robert Trost, (SYNOPSIS: Bob Powers' mother ill of an incurable disease, and Marsha, Bob's wife, is in New York caring for her. Mrs.

Powers'- illness has postponed the divorce that Bob bad demanded wcurt; Marsha has never ceased loving Bob, and finds comfort for his misunderstanding her relations with Geoffrey Tarletrm In the faith and dependence of his mother. Bob is in Mexico at work. Chapter 33 SELF-SACRIFICE will never said Maf Jha, "what your faith in me, and your caring for me, means to will always mean to me!" YOUR INSECT PROBLEM FLIT SPRAY AND NO WASPS TM HOUSE TOW UT SWAYS UTTLff-fT DOff Her voice broke; she saw Mrs. Powers' eyes fill and she spoke quickly, lightly, of other matters Marsha's first thought now was for! Mrs. Powers and for that which was good for her; she was learning that lesson of love which makes the needs of others one's own.

She had new eyes, and they told her that Mrs. Powers was helped by seeing her on those sleepless nights when pain kept vigil and that Mrs. Powers' knowing the nurs.e to be awake and alert was not the same. The fact warmed Marsha, who felt from it a rise of tenderness that her eyes stihg; an almost lemal tenderness. She reflected often and gratefully on the fact that she wa.i, "so absurdly strong" and, mercy of crowded hours and the weariness thut sent her soon Into sound and dreamless sleep.

The loss that she would know with Mrs. Powers' going, a loss that must come to Marsha who had before known nothing of 'gentle and real affection, would have crippled her had she had more time to brood upon it. As it was-- by day there were trips up and down stairs, domestic matters to attend to in the house, ordering to do, the doctor to see, beside the odd, increcping extras that took time. Such, for instances, was the call of Powers' old friend, Vinins, who Mways stayed around two hours. There were checks to or the family attorney might or the Curate or the Rector.

to fumble thickly for her elusive slippers. Then, a around her, she would make shivering, stumbling way down the passage. If the light by Mrs. Powers' bed showed a yellow slit beneath the door, Marsha would thick herself to.sharp wakefulness and push open the door. "Pain, dcarrst?" she would ask "We can do no more than so much!" the weary doctor hnd admitted t- Marsha; "(he effect of opintrs wears away with this!" She would see Mrs Powers smile on hor.

her eyes she woudd hear, "Just a little, dear" She would settle by the bed; sometimes Mrs. Powers admitted that she would have to have "a little pellet" and when- this happenad puul.l Mrs. Pnwwn mulrt diverted, en- Urtalned--ond Bdb's letters must be written every two days. Many the worlds for Marsh.i, who had known but her own selfish and sometimes cruel world; and there WM to much to do in each of them, Into the black walnut bed sleep doundly fnr an hour, perhaps two; to wake i compunction and itty toothed by fo and water. Then she would slip her arms beneath Mrs.

Powers' shoulders to lift her while she drank. After that she would sit down by the bed to wait, watch and hope; lo hope so fully, so fervently, that she was often drained by the energy she Rave to hope. "Please, please!" she petitioned silently of that vague something that was drawing rloser and growing warm for Marsha; "PI ease-keep pain from her!" "You'll cet cold, dear," Mrs. Powers would murmur. Marsha would answer with convincing, "I'm quite warm," fre- nuwvtlv when hpr hands were stiffened by the cold and ihe had to ret her teeth to keep them from chattering, "Will you.

just to gratify me, wrap tliat cnmfortff "If you like, but I'm not cold. Is it nnv better, dear?" "I think so." And then apr.in. tit back to wait If -WHS iit such times that shr ftlt oddly close to Bob: quite as if strength sustained her, If his love enrompafSed her, if Whu "Flf wrtt" tjftWWn" thfWJ RrTcT as if he And nnr niffht nhe In chill, dimly lit mom nhe fell asleep to wake with ita't and nob had heard Bob My. "Mv oVori 1 Hear' Mj tired 1 Tt had made her tremble violently. "You spoko, mother''" sh? faltered.

pfession that had rooted hi an unusually long and trying day, were gone. Bob must not know how bad It was, she decided again and again; he must never know! When he returned, she must keep him from the room at the bad hours. She sondi- ered, and at length, ways of doing this. She decided that she could with the help of the servants and the nurse, who vould certainly understand the futility of his having more hurt than must be his. "You'll break down," said the nurse, one morning that followed a sleeplesa night; "it's just a whim of hers, wanting to see you; it'll wear you out!" For a brief moment a little of Marsha's dull arrogance returned; being tired.

Do, you understand, Miss Thorpe?" "Yes, Mrs. Powers. I didn't mean to annoy you, but you're too selfless." "Nor did I mean to be sharp. But I want to be with her, to do everything I can for her! And if she thouaht I was being worn down, it would make it too difficult, you see 9 The nurse did see, but she did not cease to be troubled. She released pressure through angry mutters to Hannah, to Ellen; mutters in which she said, ''She's wearing herself out! That's all! The human body won't stand more than so much.

When's he cominfi back anyway? She's a saint and--" But Marsha wns finding new food often with Bob," said Mrs. Powers; "Bob loves it--" And Mrs. Powers' life ending, Marsha was certain, was the very reason why she would never go with Bob to the Adirondacks place His loving it would, of course, wall it away from All that the faded, wasted, small women had been to Bob began to be too apparent to Marsha and it led her to write him, in extra letters which Marsha did not show to Mrs, Powers, every small detail concerning his mother which she felt could interest him; his mother's enjoyments; how she spent her time; what they were reading; of her appetite, (if good, that day) who had balled upon her. The chronicle was faithful in narrating all that Marsha felt that such word would i help him; but once and again doubt I crept in through her weariness, which reduced her judgment and left her certain only of the fact that she loved two souls with all her heart and must live, in the chill future, without both of them. She wrote, one doubtful day, tier head ached from lack of sleep and she could not see clearly.

written as I have, thinking it might help you. If my extra letters annoy you, put parentheses about 'Your letters are so long and good, dearest' and I'll understand that you wish a terse report and no more. "I don't want to make things harder for you than they must be; i I thought you might, and mrnt ing what she could for "mother." The diversion hkad was looking, with Mrs, Powtrs at Mrs. Powers' many portraits and snapshots of Bob. Bob in the photographer's high chair.

Bob In his tint short dresses. Bob wearing his first Milnr-sutt with the real whistle of wtlltfh hi T4B6T ber'fi so prouoT, hanging from a cord lhat was around hit neck. Bob in a military-school uniform, later, In college and on crew; Bob at some picnic (jirl seated ilutvMrd sSe pitcher, but ache and the de- rwlivd with a chilHnf of heart) Bob with hii father, thai happy thoy Abroad. LY.tK- t'lii her-' ng tro, ctme BAO rffiHM', TTH AQoTlWuBCiCS pkce. "Of you will go thcra naturally, feel I intrude where I can't belong through telling you of your mother.

''The only thing I could not forgive is your letting me continue to annoy you, if I have." (Copyright, 1934, by K- Havlland- Taylor) Marsha tomorrow, gram from Mexico, a tele- Wool is rendered itchtess shrinkless by a new process. and The Deadbeatst (Atlanta Constitution) Foreign nations now regard Uncle Sam as the loan wolf, Wearing spectacles was considered a mark of education in China 2000 yean before the art of making glasses became generally known. In the English, French, Latin, Italian, and Greek languages, the moon is feminine, but in the Teutonic languages it is masculine. QUALITY tnt united that TARBOX mcrctundlw of quiUt; anteed to dunbUitjr md construe- overhead nse entailed In Exceptional Bargains! Studio Couches nS.M Dntble Snidto CouelMf covered hi attractive. in attertmtDl Mian.

ECZEMA ITCH CndLwt In 3 you can atop Itrti- nf reliabto M1SNT-- nj relief. Opt a Me boi PKTBHflON'8 OIKT- dlfWTMd wnd MM for Iff to you will to the Mfry pWiwi SttfetBtL fta butKnuw iwi tain HtAnied fend tooamra, can be wtflr Trr 1 8.5O USM Rradto CMMhtt. nwtl? tlfw In ot $27.75 Complete BED OUTFITS i i tfatei ytj.ngrtty CM hclwd la BUT $14.50 Cwnlitlnjr MfOI flU In any Urn $19. Can -ftlJOB. KAASJABC nrvi i 1 COMBINATION RANGE ENAMELED $94.50 FfNE FuwfmmE 1 AK5UA 7S 81 MAIN ST.

FTTCHSURG, MAM..

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About Fitchburg Sentinel Archive

Pages Available:
317,153
Years Available:
1873-1977