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The Register from Santa Ana, California • Page 4

Publication:
The Registeri
Location:
Santa Ana, California
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SANTA ANA REGISTER, SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1941 the weather Southern Pertly cloudy, over ooastaJ moun- tarns and Rlonp extreme south portion coastal area: scattered clouds tonight and Sunday; slightly warmer today and Sunday EMERGENCY CAIXS In caws of fire, accident or etner- cenry. call teierhone operator, wbo Voters of Seal Beach approved will assist you in vour caJ! tc a 840,000 school bond issue Friday in a special election by NOTICE OF INTENTION five to one majority. Exact fig tf Nor 1TU Ha seen wa, Yoshiko ures on the vote shows 204 votes nm. 20 North Hollywood. 40 votes and a total Angles of 245 ballots cast.

The bond is- iaVies p. Little, 27; Naomi Black, sue is designed to provide a new '5-Laura V. Tenur. unit of four class rooms, li! tions in existing structures, and Joseph W. Maxcy 25; Rosemary a additional tennis and basketball K.u«ri»« I courts.

is. Los Construction will start shortly after school closes in June, J. H. McGaugh, district superintendent hopes. Next step in L.

Chambers. £5. La Hahra the procedure now is in the hands Jack P. Stsefe 22 Artesia; ini- 0j Orange county supervisors, who will advertise the bonds for three weeks at one week intervals. LICENSES ISSTED BIRTHS DR Mr.

and Mrs. Avin Drake 22 Kilson Drive, Santa Ana at Santa Ana Valley hospital, March 15. a son. Mr. and Mrs.

Walter Timken. Post Office Box 21 Olive, at St. Joseph hospital. March 15. 1541, a daughter.

Other legal technicalities in the process will just about be finished by the end of school, he says. Bids calls for the three improvement items will be issued separately. They will be for the four- room new unit, another for removing a well between the present third and fourth grade rooms, ar.d other remodeling, and for laying the concrete tennis courts. DEATHS Mrs. John C.

Gourley, of Brea, at the Cottage hospital, Fullerton. 14. at 4:15 Funeral services Sunday, March IS, at 3 p. m. in the McAulay and Suter chapel.

Fullerton. Mrs. Gourley is survived by her husband and one daughter, Mrs. Davis W. Goodwin, of Brea Lone Beach.

March 14. 1941, Ernest Dunn, aged 57 years. Survived by his wife, Mary Alice Dunn of San Juan Capistrano; one son. Marion Dunn of Hynes and one daughter, Mrs. Liner Rosenbaum of San Juan Capistrano.

Funeral services will be held Monday at 1:30 from Smith of his assistants. It was also chapel. Interment Fairhaven ceme- asserted officially that his arrest EFJTLF.R—March 14. 1941. Mrs.

Ma- was connected purely with his be! E. Beitler. aged 54 years of prjvate activities and had noth- West Seventeenth street, Ana: she is survived by her hus- ing to do with his journalistic THAT BODY OF WATER, above, a lake in a new city part of Delhi! And the little girl sister. Esther Martinez, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Guadalupe Martinez, Dyer road, Route 2, Box 375, Santa Ana, just playing beside her home in the And that a swan in the "Donald a member of the Martinez family, right in his element, as anyone might guess! In the far background, left, and hardly visible in the picture is a nanny goat in the remains of an old car to keep her feet dry. Flowers in the are at the right. The little boy at the left, assisting Esther in her cruise, is Vicente Jimenez, 10, son of Mr. and Mrs. Vicente, Route 2, Box 374, Santa Ana, neighbors of the Martinez family and their Photo.

FDR Asks Probe Into Nazi Action (Continued From Page 11 band. George Beitler; one daughter, Mrs. Audrey Wilson, of El Modena; four sons, Leslie LeRoy Beitler, of Long Beach; Earl of Huntington Park; Stanley B. and Dean F. Beitler both of Santa Ana; her parents.

Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Fowler, of Santa Ana; two sisters.

Mrs. A. Fuller, of Santa Ana, and Mrs. Lillian Smalley, of Costa Mesa; three brothers. Earl Fowler, of Beach, Everett E.

Fowler, of Santa Ana. and Lloyd i partment.) Fowler of Garden Grove. Also two Hottelet Was arrested at the grandeh dren. Funeral services Will be held at 3 Monday af- which I share with ternoon at the Brown and Wagner bv sjx men wh0 identified Colonial Chapel, the Rev. Thomas activities.

Nabbed By Gestapo Zapp and Tonn were arrested Tuesday tinder a federal grand jury indictment charging them with violating the act which required agents of foreign powers to register with the state de- Roth, pastor of the Friends church of El Modena, officiating. 14, 3941, Opal A Crawford, aged 40 years of 414 street. Tustin. She is survived by her husband. Dale F.

Crawford; one daughter, Una A. Crawford, of Tustin: one son, Leo D. Crawford, and one daughter-in-law, Frances Crawford, both of Vista: her father, Morgan A Page of Santa Ana; one sister, Mrs. Hazel Cady, of San Juan Capistrano; three brothers, William V. Page of Corcoran.

John A. Page, of Tustin. and H. R. Page, of Van Horne, Iowa.

Funeral services will be held at 3 o'clock Monday afternoon at the Brown and Wagner Colonial chapel. Interment in Fairhaven cemetery. night at his home. 225 West Culver avenue Orange, George G. Goslee, 78, native of Colborne, Ontario, Canada, and resident of Orange 21 years, coming to California from Missoula, Mont.

iving are one daughter, Mrs Morris Jenson, Garden Grove: two sisters. Mrs Annie Cole. Rochester, and Mrs. Minnie Fyfe of Toronto, Canada: one step-son, James Atchinscn. Orange.

Services are to be held Monday at 10 a. m. at Orange Trinity Episcopal church of which Mr. Goslee was a member, and will be conducted by the vicar, the Rev. F.

Softlee. Interment wil be made in Fairhaven beside his wife. Mrs. Amelia Goslee who passed away in 1932. C.

W. Coffey, Orange funeral director, in charge. FUNERAL NOTICE Santa Ana, March 13, 1541, Fdward C. Erwin: survived by his wife, Lena H. Erwin; one brother, Harry A.

Erwin of Corning. Y. Funeral services will be held Monday at from Smith Tui- chapel. Interment private. themselves as agents of the Gestapo, the secret police.

I myself was held incommunicado in the apartment for nearly three hours. The United States embassy made immediate inquiries regarding arrest. No Visitors Allowed Up to early this morning neither the embassy nor the United Press had been able to communicate with Hottelet. He was held at the Alexanderplatz police headquarters. Hottelet still was held incommunicado Saturday night and there was no immediate prospect that anyone would be allowed to visit him before early next week.

It was understood that the case would take the "normal under Gentian law with a preliminary investigation to determine whether, on the basis of evidence, the case should be submitted to trial and what the official charges will be. Helped Enemy 70TH ANNIVERSARY Observing its 70th anniversary, the First Baptist church of Santa Ana will conduct a special anniversary service at 10:30 a. m. tomorrow, followed by a dinner in the social rooms, according to announcement today by the Rev. Harry Evan Owings, pastor.

Membership of History and growth of the lo- cal church will be reviewed at airdromes and docks from Norway to Brest, on the German-occupied French coast, the communique said. The ministry said two British planes were missing. More than 500 incendiary bombs were dropped in one section of London last night. The Liverpool area also had a fairly long raid and a number of persons were injured in one district. Raiders Downed (Berlin reports said one British raider was downed during attacks on various parts of western Germany, and the official German news agency quoted German GURUS BILL these events, showing how its starting membership of 13 has been increased to its present total of 968.

The church was organized in March of 1871. Only one of the 13 charter members is now living. Mrs. Leona Hickey English, of Pomona. In 1876 the first building was erected at a cost of $4000 on lots donated by W.

H. Spurgeon, the of Santa Some of the faithful flock mortgaged their homes to make their contributions. The second building was erected and dedicated in 1901 during the pastorate of Dr. J. Herndon Garnett, father of Mrs.

Mac O. Robbins and Thomas Carlton Garnett. Built In 1913 The present edifice was built in 1913 while Dr. Otto S. Russell was pastor.

During the 70 years the church has had 15 pastors, the present pastor, the Rev. Harry Evan Owings, starting his ministry in December, 1928. Only one of the former pastors, Dr. Frederick G. Davies, of West Los Angeles, is still living.

He served the church from 1917 to 1920. R. P. Meairs is superintendent of the church school. saying they were having difficulty dodging searchlight beams being used by British night fighters.) defenders claimed four more Nazi night raiders brought down during attacks a munique said were a considerable scale and spread over most of the A large number of casualties, including some dead, was reported from Glasgow and its surrounding communities of southwestern Scotland, where explosives and incendiaries added to the wreckage of the night before.

The communique said most of the injured were in a block of flats smashed by bombs, and pnH-T pqcp Rill described the raid as UIU heavy as Thursday when Glasgow had its first severe pounding of the war. All sections of assembly bill 1032 will be investigated and studied by a three-man committee selected by the Orange county farm bureau board of directors this week, according to Secretary C. J. Marks. The bill, which already has been introduced into the state legislature, would set up a standardization of all California citrus.

It would set up grades and standards for oranges, lemons, and grapefruit, Marks said. C. J. Mauerhan of Anaheim, will act as chairman. The other two committee members include S.

M. Rosedale of Yorba Linda and A. D. Smiley of Orange. They are to report to directors at the next regular meeting, Thursday, April 3, or at a special meeting should one be called, Marks explained.

Solons Okeh (Continued From Page 1) Russo-Nippon Pact Forecast (Continued From Page 1) TRAFFIC WAS BLOCKED ON COAST HIGHWAY for several hours after this huge section of the highway collapsed at Bluebird canyon, just below Laguna Beach. Workers reported that a culvert running beneath the highway had been washed away and the support of the roadbed fell more than 12 feet. Size of the break in the road may be judged by the spectators standing at the left. Workers re1- ported that the road was washed out for considerable distance back of the break, forming a cavern beneath the parts of the road that did not Photo). 100 Families Flee As Floods Hit (Continued From Page 1) and cables.

Telephone service in a number of sections of the coun- arrest was first an- was temporarily interrupted as nounced by the official agency which said that he, representative of an American news had been arrested early this a result of the storm. Highways and parts of the Santa Fc railroad right-of-way were washed out, auto traffic was MOREOW-Funerai services for Mrs morning as being suspect- slowed down or completely stop Wash in urt? of espionage for an enemy ped in many places of the county passed away March 13 1941, will be held Monday. March 17 at 2 p. B.Z.-Am-Mittag, first of the aft- from the Winbitrler Memorial chapel. Rev.

Floyd Thompson, pastor of the Church of Christ (Southeide) officiating-. Committal at Fairhaven cemetery. ernoon newspapers, published the official agency announcement on its second page under the headline, for Six officials who identified and train schedules, particularly in the Fullerton area, were disrupted badly. The San Diegan, crack streamliner of the Santa Fe, due in Fullerton at 6:10 p. arrived at 7:15 p.

two rubber booted men of the track repair CARD OF THANKS I wish to express my sincere my frh-nds and neighbors for their themselves as lrom the Gestapo wading in front of it the en- many e. ts of kindness and sympathy knocked on the door of our apart- -c atid also them- beautiful floral i- 7 j- and also their beautiful floral offer- jhient in the 17th district, Making marie wilfgram They requested him to tire distance of three miles between Anaheim and Fullerton. Tracks Flooded Water 10 feet deep flooded the tracks and caused a washout of trackage on the Fullerton side of Atwood and another section of trackage was made impassable several hundred feet east of the Fullerton depot, making it necessary to switch trains to the adjacent tracks. The Santa Grand i a 4 ec- i Limited, en route to Los SMifS dU' Accepted By Union by the Atwood washout8 ttT Hottelet or Orange, and did CINCINNATI, March 'to leave the apartment, or to tele- A beautiful new corridor is now dress and leave with them under construction. Special prices' Search Papers for a short time range from $135 The officials refused to tell me to $250.

Small down payment, to search the apartment, going convenient terms. For information all papers. 1 was awak- call Orange 131, Melrose Abbey by the noise and the Mausoleum, 101 Highway bet. in the room- 1 found the Santa Ana and Anaheim. going through personal of which some was Hot- some mine.

Mediation Offer M. Harrison, ide-nt of the Railway Labor Ex- i Hottelet dressed and was taken board, said today that by a gestapo man. 14 brotherhoods were accepting a mediation offer of the National1 The officials refused to teltl me Railway Mediation board in a what charge had been made dispute with major carriers, but Hottelet. They said I would count strike ballots any-j could dress, bathe and shave and waY- breakfast if I desired but The board yesterday asked the that I would not be permitted to brotherhoods to postpone the leave tbe apartment or to counting of ballots from 750,000 rail employes, who are seeking I was beld incommunicado for paid vacations. Harrison said, three hours.

The gestapo however, that the tabulation men were most polite and most would not necessarily commit the correct. They refused to search brotherhoods to strike action I bedroom, though I offered to should the members favor it, since them to do s0- They also the dispute might be ended byiasked which papers belonged to mediation meanwhile. Hottelet and which to me. The brotherhood heads wil! meet with the mediation fi0 Wednesday in Washington, cenls). COs, o'a call i Balloting ends March 20, "Taki TherC Wre 8 teLtauaSL' 25 wWin English about counting Win IP includinS John counting will begin.

The heads; EuroDe The pcstann seemX unimeresfed further action. them They collected a number a I of papers, a list of Americans consume 40.000,0001 United Press Staff correspondents, tons of ice annually, despite the membership list of the widespread use of mechanical Foreign Press association, rrigerators. 0f which Hottelet is a member of the board of governors They took also some private snapshots and la camera. HILGENFELDS NEW MORTVARY 120 E. BROADWAY ANAHEIM Faithful Service not arrive until 9:40 p.

m. in Ful lerton. First word of warning about the cloudburst was telephoned to Sheriff Jesse L. Elliott at 4:10 p. m.

by Norman Bryan, division engineer of the county road department, of Fullerton, who was working in Carbon canyon. Start Relief Work The sheriff, undersheriff and chief deputy immediately began telephoning and sending radio messages to members of the dis astert relief committee, calling them to duty. Three sheriff's cars with six deputies began patrolling the Carbon canyon area and areas lying below it and assisting Anaheim police and disaster relief committeemen in evacuating the Mexican families. Eight boats were rushed from Irvine park to the flooded areas as a safeguard. All flood control men were called to duty and Ben Lieberman, county chairman of the American Legion Major Disaster relief committee, summoned rived at the United Press office in Unter Den Linden shortly before 8 a.

Howard K. Smith, in charge of the overnight staff, and several others of the Berlin staff were on duty. Names, addresses and dates of birth of all were taken down and those in the office were told they could continue with their work At my request I was permitted but that they would be required to look through all these to find to speak only German in making whether any belonged to me. Two telephone calls, which I claimed were handed over (Service from the Berlin bureau to me without question. of the United Press continued Seven secret police officials ar-i normally throughout the night.) his workers.

Joe Scherman, head1 of the state forestry department! in the county, sent his men on patrol and Bill Hunton called out his senior Boy Scouts with their first aid and short wave radio equipment while John Cleary, head of the Santa Ana Sea Scout troop, called out his troopers to be ready for any emergency. Escape Death Deputy Sheriffs Jess Buckles and William Trapp narrowly escaped death while driving in patrol car in Santa Ana canyon near Sulphur slide when a boulder almost a yard in diameter, turn bled down the mountains side and smashed the side of the car as though it were an egg shell. The radio equipment was put out of commission by the blow. Engineer Bryan said the cloudburst in Carbon canyon created wall of which bore down on the communities below. The waters swept onto the highways north of Anaheim, filling them from curb to curb and creating lakes throughout the area.

Then the waters rolled on to the Cypress district and finally to Los Alamitos. The county police radio system at the office was thrown out of commission early in the storm by a bolt of lightning but the system was immediately connected to the standby unit and communications were continued with but a interruption. Delhi Becomes Lake The Santa Fe trains last night were from 30 minutes to almost three hours late due to the torrential rains which buried the age. Water wTas two feet deep most of the distance along the trackage between Anaheim and Fullerton. It was 9:30 before a crew of 20 men was able to repair the damage at Atwood as Taking waters which flowed down Halladay street, in Santa Ana, the Delhi area was largely an area of Halladay, Dyer, Adams, Main, Emmett, Measor and Maple were the streets most flooded in the district.

The Ralph Castaneda and Frank Gomez families moved from the area when two carloads of unidentified men and boys spread a false rumor that the Prado dam was about to break. Antonio Holguin, 232 Adams street, heard a noise in his room and striking a match and looking around the room, he discovered the floor had a foot of water all over it and the water was flowing through his house. Two young goats belonging to him and harbored in a shed at the rear of the place were drowned, he told his neighbor, Matt Lujan, 234 Adams. Mr. and Mrs.

Lee Trujillo, route 2, Dyer road, Santa Ana, saved three of their goats by placing them on the front porch of their home. It was necessary to dig a ditch beneath the Pacific Electric siding tracks in the Delhi district to permit a better flow of water which was backing up into homes nearby. 3 SOUGHT UTTER Three Mexican men were sought by officers today upon complaint of Mrs. Florence Parse, route 2, Orange, that they knocked her unconscious last night and criminally assaulted her. She told officers she and Paul McMillan, of Santa Ana, bought a bottle of wine, drove to a spot on Garden Grove boulevard a half mile east of Harbor boulevard and stopped to have a couple of drinks about 6 p.m.

The three Mexicans drove up and stopped nearby, she said, and while one of them slugged McMillan into unconsciousness, the others slugged her and attacked her. She said the third man also attacked her as he and the others kept beating and choking her. A description of the men was furnished officers. Mrs. Parse said she would sign a complaint if the men can be located.

Death Of Man Is Investigated Investigation of the death of Ernest Dunn, 57, formerly of San Juan Capistrano, is being made today by the homicide bureau of the Los Angeles county office following discovery of body in the Los Angeles river yesterday morning near North Long Beach. Dunn had been reported missing by his son, Marion Dunn of 929 Mortz street, Hynes, where he had been living. Officers in the Los Angeles department said that they had received a missing report March 6 by the son, and whereabouts were not known until discovery of his body yesterday. The body was taken to the Hunter mortuary in Hynes. No inquest is planned.

Dunn is survived by his Alice Dunn, of San Juan Capistrano; his son, Marion Dunn of Hynes; and a daughter, Mrs. Liner Rosenbaum, of San Juan Capistrano. Funeral services are to be conducted Monday at 1:30 from the Smith and Tuthill chapel here. Interment will be in Fairhaven cemetery. RAF, Nazi Airmen Trade Blows (Continued From Page 1) mand reported an attack on the English steel center of Sheffield, where several steel plants and an armament factory were said in its comments regarding stops at Moscow, one on his way to Europe and one while returning 000,000 to the Far East.

New Italian sources declared Matsuoka will make concessions to Moscow which in turn will compensate Russia for waiving her guarantee to Yugoslavia. This guarantee, it was stated, at present obliges Yugoslavia to remain out of the Axis-Japanese alliance and to withhold permission for passage of foreign troops across Yugoslavian territory. It was pointed out that the Ital5 ian press has been extremely re- provide, according to the estimates: More Planes Planes, engines and equipment Ordnance, armor, $1,343,000,000. Tanks, motorized $362,000,000. Warships, cargo and facilities to have been hit.

The German high command also reported air assaults on Tilbury docks, port facilities in Plymouth and Southampon and at targets in Leeds.) Apparently Germany daylight raiders attempted to or actually did reach the London area this afternoon. An alarm was sound- but the all clear was heard a short time later. Raids Ruhr Valley The air ministry, reporting on the British offensive, said that the Ruhr valley industrial district as well as Duesseldorf, Rhine port and manufacturing center, were hit in a scale The RAF also raided shipping, Russia. plants $752,000.000. Food machine tools, other Repairing and fitting out of foreign Miscellaneous military Unspecified Mr.

Roosevelt already has released an initial list of war supplies for immediate shipment to Britain and Greece, some of which already has started to flow. There is some belief this may be followed later by shipments of food concentrates. Lagunan Fails To Win Damages Dr. Paul Conover, Laguna Beach; osteopath, who was injured when his car collided with the rear of a truck at 101 highway and Jeffrey I thrust out his left hand striking road near Irvine last October 5, me on the side of the face, failed yesterday in his attempt to he hit me in the chest or Brutality Charge Is Investigated (Continued From Page 1) collect damages from the Irvine Valencia Growers and Orval mer, truck driver employed by the association. A jury in Superior Judge George K.

court, after deliberating 20 minutes, denied Dr. suit for $10,810 damages. stomach and I fell down. When I got up, he hit me on the face again and then on the chest, knocking me down Five members of the county grand jury and a committee from the state bar association was on hand when the hearing opened. SERIAL STORY DOLLARS TO DOUGHNUTS BY EDITH ELLINGTON COPYRIGHT, 1941.

NEA SERVICE. INC. DIVORCES GRANTED Four divorces and two annulment decrees were granted at uncontested hearings in superior court late yesterday, as follows: Arna Billingslea from Frank Billingslea, on grounds of cruelty; Minnie Parham from Claude Parham, cruelty; Della H. Ardaiz from Gaston E. Ardaiz, cruelty; Betty Van Houten from James Van Houten, cruelty; Jewell Paulsell, annulment of marriage to Max Paulsell; Gertrude V.

Grosse, annulment of marriage to James A. Grosse. YESTERDAYi Jammed Inlo the Beatrice a pretty Kiri, to figure if she is happy. Suddenly, the go out. The car short.

The girl suggegta there may he danger of a riot. A trainman to walk back to the Beatrice terrified. I FRIEND FROM CHAPTER yes, you the girl said cheerfully. can always do the things you have to do. Get hold of me, now.

it. Jump to the catwalk. Come on, Her teeth set, holding back her fear with an effort that was like warding off a physical blow, Beatrice clung to the girl. She closed her eyes for a tiny second. The narrow black catwalk, the shine of the tracks, the swift thought of how horrible it must be to be pushed off the be crushed under the wheels of an oncoming train.

Then she jumped, and the jar of her tall heels on the wooden walk shocked through her. It brought common sense with it, and a quick, steadying sanity. all she said. I was it by a few thousand, honey, and got a replied the girl. know mobs.

Getting scared is like timing in on the invasion from Mars. First thing you know, everybody else has hit the wave length, all scared too, and fighting and pushing and trampling She laughed. your chin The subway tunnel, under the river, was black and damp. faced people, feeling their way along to the station that must lie somewhere ahead, were silent and cautious. Beatrice felt, walking with them, her hand in the hand of the girl ahead, that they were like ghosts, threading their way through this blackness.

Fear and danger squeezed their hearts. a million dollars she thought oddly. the same as they are, here. all equals, CHE never knew how long it was she walked in darkness, in that narrow file along the catwalk. Minutes.

Hours. Perhaps a lifetime. All she knew was that some truth she had glimpsed, sitting in her car and watching the anonymous throng pushing past her, became more clear and more intelligible, here in the subway. I understand them. all people, like me.

The same dreams and desires, the same hopes and fears. Money cushioned me away from them, but now the bars are down. part of them and part of me. I like Hearteningly, the lights of a station ahead gleamed through the darkness at last. A little sigh of relief went up from the plodding humans, and the girl turned to Beatrice.

How gallant she was! The people ahead of them went faster. Soon she could see that they were going up a little stairway. They were on the platform. It was light, and they were calling encouragement. nothing to a man cried.

on, only a few steps Beatrice and the girl with her mounted the steps, too. Relief and thanksgiving washed over Beatrice. They were safe. The girl with whom she walked in the tunnel said, to normal. Come on, get out into the fresh On the stairs going up to the street, Beatrice paused a moment.

feel as though a steam roller had gone over she confessed. The girl said, too. I hope a place around where we can get some TT was cold outside. Cold and dark, with a sharp wind that cut through thin jacket. But how good it was to be in the street again! How good to see the dark sky, and the little glinting stars! It was minutes before Beatrice noticed that the neighborhood in which she found herself was distinctly peculiar.

Old buildings, and dingy stores, and shabby men shuffling by on the pavement awful place to be marooned when dying for a cup of said the girl. it were beer, now. Or some the standby of hobos and grinned the girl. split with She was looking about with eyes that recognized and tagged the street. have to walk a couple of blocks to get Somewhere in the tunnel Beatrice had turned her ankle.

It was throbbing now. She became aware of the fact that she could not remember ever having walked so much, except in the country. feet she said. The girl laughed. should talk! I stand on my feet all day, selling.

If my feet hurt, get alarmed. be turning to stone, Beatrice repeated. work in a In the Beatrice caught her breath. This gir. worked in She worked in the store which Grandfather had founded; the store which kept Beatrice on Park Avenue, the store which paid ffr her car and mink coat and the polo ponies for Clarence Whal would she say, if she heard Beatrice telling her, own She believe it, ol course.

stare at Beatrice thought swiftly, look around for a telephone so shft could call an ambulance and havs me taken to the lunatic a moment the coincidence seemed incredible. That out of a city with seven million people, Beatrice, who owned should have picked a subway car in which to ride and found herself side by side with a girl who worked in But in the next breath, she realized that it so startling, after all. Hundreds of girls worked in Girls who kept the stocks, girls who waited on customers, girls who modeled clothes, girls who ran the elevators, girls who typed the letters and answered the telephones and wrapped the packages. do you the girl was asking. Beatrice fought out of her rev- ery.

Oh! fact not working just said the girl, amazingly. a good-looking outfit got on. But winter coat was How fortunate thought that out, right after she! stuck her coat into the parcel locker! do to look shabby when job the girl said. though. If you need a job, you be looking for one.

So really, they ought to give the jobs to the girls who look the shabbiest. They need it the most Only they do things that way. That would be too She turned her head and looked at Beatrice appraisingly. bet take you on at just the type. Refined.

Clean cut, good-looking You look Her voice jeered. want a salesgirl selling 50-cent to look like a deb. And you da Let me take you down to I know (To Be Continued).

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Years Available:
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