The strongest and frailest lives. hy the wind 5, 1982. Hor Carla Bellefonte, Pa, February 3 eyes as she d& love 4 THE GIRLS THAT ARE WANTED. | "op The girls that are wanted are good giris— | Rodney Good from the heart to the lips; of bronze, and Pure as the lily is white and pure, (COUrage_tie st From its heart to its sweet leat tips. Jazz music, wi The girls that are wanted are home girls— | *Carla,” Girls that are mother's right hand, Whenever I That fathers and brothers can trust to, and pheneyef understand. And the little ones very terre Girls that are fair on the hearthstone, now, for we "And pleasant when nobody sees, Kind and sweet to their own folks, BI the the Ready and anxious to please. Carla The girls that are wanted are wise girls, | gpe Jf0 : That know what to do and to say; ograph sat on wv table. She That drive with a smile or a Soft Word | gop to her knees and burrowed in- The wrath of the household away. | 4 tne black stack of brittle records. The girls that are wanted are girls of sense AL the Fry Dorset 1 3he Jouuilsil 2 Whom fashion can never deceive; | in StrWitls Mie nptiscted in BO OO tr. tn ony’ | were stamped. in folds of her brain. And dare, “what ‘is sily, to leave. | “Prohaply.it's out of pant" Sb Th Is that are wanted are careful girls, | mused, turning the crank. “Mould he ia what a thing will cost; | broken.” But immediately the piece Who use with a prudent, generous hand, came to life again, and nee But sees that nothing is lost. | was Sitios. 8 » been eight | The girls that are wanted are girls with | Yn I do : hearts Wha ; They are wanted for mothers and wives With just a photograph | Wanted to cradle in loving arms, | To tell my troubles to— | That was Rod's photograph, over The clever, the witty, the brilliant girl, | Litre gu po ens “The dean Thuy Ae VeIY Jew. uhiefdtais; the corner the scrawled words, | But, oh! for the wise, loving, home iris, | the right cc or Jn acre , | There's a constant and steady demand. “9% SAT | po h all my Jove. Red ——— senseless, jealous quarrel—he left | FIVE DOLLAR BILL | school. Just quit, two months be- en | fore graduation. A crazy, impul- Monday morning, and no scram- give gesture—but that was Rod. And | bling into second-best clothing and word drifted back that he was in the | clattering down hot sidewalks to- oj] fields of Oklahoma. From time | ward the elevated. None of that | to time the Alumni Bulletin of the | for two rapturous weeks. “I'll be college printed paragra about | just lazy,” Carla told herself. him-—how he had run up a fortune! i ragil | from a shoestring. And later, SLrange a ee Bes countries were connected with From a tin, Carla poured a twisty name—Mesopotamia, the south of tream yellow cream sugar, Russia, M Places where men | : OF hen you were 28 and ex. thirsted or starved or died of fever, though. drilling through sticky clay to se- pony Se Hg: we oT i cret pools of the earth. thin | slices of brown toast and rustled the What'll T do big pages of the morning newspaper When I'm alone with only under her fingers. Dreams of you At the front , laden with What'll I do? | cable dispatches m kalf the cap-' itals of the world, she glanced only ooh fted the needle and shut | off the motor. “I won't it | casually. Carla knew no one in more. No sense to it. play, it an London or Vienna. But she did "9 oii jt» She lifted the record know plently in Chicago. Nice boys in her two hands. they were, too; boys with good jobs ~ gne would marry Jerry Wade, the | who could take her to Vienna on 8 !jawyer—she was dully convinced of | Wade. jt. ° And it wouldn't do to have the | ghost of a dead song living in their | record cabinet. i honeymoon. There was Jerey Soon he'd be junior partner aloo firm of lawyers, and probably at 50 | he'd be a Senator.—But none them was Rod Carver. She read through twice the critic's | review of Alice Darbell’'s new from Rod once told her she Darbell. Carla slipped and gazed at her reflection in mirror. Someone h=d said that woman looked desirable at break. fast; but where she was concerned, Cazla Tara decided justly, that was un-. e. a | sense in Her thoughts return- | ans Ja Carla yawned, poking at smooth Sounded like the in| lips with the back ot 8 «8 slip- pictures of London Jociety | Pe ied agiin. and to ber pa: Ho Carla “Miss,” and his dic- 'd dress | tion was cold and correct, like com- go dow De sheld a | versation in 8 Vicialjan novel. ce 1 “A record? To be sure, a record! now. Only these want ads and— | @m every anxious to seeure it. Ti a $0. se | Something in the gray pages of | FL, PAY BBO ould call at ridan road address. : Carla ! narrow feet into white pumps, i What'll I do?-I will pay MArrOw fool il white Summ. the Lark series 63,- 888) of Rigg: 8 Comb or- | mirror, she ed ‘on a saucy hat. | chestration of “Whatll I Do?" | The ret A th | ee S008 cofiition. Wil. light package neatly with grocer's record, telephone Lake Park oT: t ae i i oh J ne ne G5 It had been their piece—hers and sky wit { y of a - Rod's!—back-—back elevator | how | & man with homore and he was a senior at ears, seated her in a the university. The newspaper | Ch carved some time early in whispered through her Supls d Ital Retin anacs 3g: ts rattled to the floor. Carla's 4 man Mould id icull staring at ne Sr * ord. “Yes. I'm sure it's what you “I can’t think about it,” Carla *¢ ‘ urmured, up suddenly. “T po myself. Mi Wwe “I won't look at it,” she whisper- “ » | to her. He did not the. string. 8 Moh g ike. Tor “been tnmmkimg | He untied it. Carefully, with dry —just couldn't. And besides, if it | £Hci she worked, He waa. the was Rod, I wouldn't want to see | Kind wlio, A: Ryan him. He'd be , with all | "0 ’ trangest that money, and probably I've (&* all, why did he desire a reco ed, too. And I'm just not going jon hich wan stamped 4. relic of read it again. Just not—" | i But she did. She sat in the wick- | Hier nost stared at the naked res. er chair by the opened window and Ord in his hands. he while a warm of air from com on of another tte. Shatleld. BveIuE aera I Toei IE Ter iii So0Mrsue v: 2; | “Ah, to be sure. Stupid of mie. The ad was not in the personals Beg pardon.” He bowed—rather column, and that was one reason humbly, she thought-—and opened Carla thought it might be Rod. In| the top of a great walnut pho. the want-to-buy column it appeared. graph. And when plaintive horns Who but Rod would pay $5 for an gophed grandly from the sound-box, eight-year-old record? Who? he listened with an air of politeness, “Oh, lots of people,” she argued, hut not of comprehension rising and going toward the bath. i “And anyway,” she added definitely, What'll I “I'm not going to phone"—- When you are far away She was a long time in the tub, And I am bi lolling luxuriously while the water What'll I do?— her shoulders. For 50 weeks |The falls on Friday. “Before I answer, Jerry something out for me ” “ —yes." “Well—if an Englishman butler all his life, and suddenly ‘I should say—um-m-m-—not very long.” “Why, yes I suppose he would. But what has all t go to do—7" “A lot,” she murmured, across the table and pov Bhs: fingers over his hand. “I'm sorry, Jerry—very, very sorry, but—" She looked up and met his gaze. “I'm | dreadfully afraid I can never marry | the envelope provided you It had been Rod's apartment, she could swear it had. taken? made fortunes in trade called young ladies She hadn't thought of that. Perhaps, after all, no Rod had been waiting behind a curtain. 1 annually necessitates the return casionally the shout of “hands ed doorway, watching her give the record tek butler, and pl ng to 8! ” But it had to be Rod—just had to me. He might have come in a taxi. He would be waiting outside her door in the upper hall. Hurrying, she climbed the stairs. But the stuffy hall was empty. “Goodby, Rod,” she whispered softly. And then, from beyond the closed door of her apartment, Carla heard music. It was sad music-—sad & . E “But how,” breathed Carla at last, | You know,” he the - you can do with a five IMPORTANT DATES On January wont Into effect and a. study. of its men y ! in will the 13th—be en ntered ean ay, a5. J | ! y e year, June 21, falls on Tuesday and the shortest day, December 21, falls on Wednes- Lincoln's birthday, February 12, Ash Wednesday falls on February 10. Good Friday comes on March 25. Easter Sunday comes on March 25. All Fools day, April 1, falls Fri day. Memorial day, May 30, falls on Mone da “Th South of July comes on The Jewish New Year's day will be October 1-2. Monday. ption day will be Tuesday, No- day, November 11, falls Thanksgiving day will be Thurs- day, November 24. 8, December 25, comes on Sunday. El vem + off with pay, and read ads about song that your favorite What'll I do EG aAwoune When I am wondering who notes. sad, sad notes. Is kissing you, A dance in the women's quad- Whatll I do? Z3ngle 3 aa had automatic hadcome| The machine an out sh Splete te play. Carla device which snipped off the mech- was very young that night—ob, anism as the music ceased. The Jerry scowled over the problem. Sack. Eritnyriifey Mothers Day falls on Staday: | June 14, falls on Tues- | AULU OPERATORS MUST HAVE Pennsylvania motor vehicle opera- toss nave been reaitnded by R. Rich. iL reason Operators should or their 1932 license now. y v license may be used on and after February 15. | There are two questions (n the | applications which must be unswer- ed, Stickel pointed out. TH gE “Having properly signed the ap- plication and answered" ques- tions, attach check or money order in the amount of $2 to the applica- tion and forward to the Bureau of Motor Vehicles at burg, using r that pur- pose,” Director Stickel said. | “If the address on the application Just like him 18 not correct, the incorrect address game, | to bring a butler from London. But Should be crossed out and the cor- on the Suppose-—suppose she had been mis. rect address shown on the large por- folded, Maybe Englishmen who tion of the card which the applicant on her tail. Carelessness on the part of ‘applicants in questions | and failure to enclose the correct of many applications. This not only causes in recei cards but handicaps the bureau in giving ‘the prompt service of which it is capable.” Operators who have not received ho have not changed their address since i t yi f 3 the ureau at once, forwarding to it their 1931 operator's license number, also name and address as indicated on the 1931 card. “Every year we receive complain from operators that’ they have not ved application,” Stickel ’ that fol- § : § 3 HERI jie any auto- 2g ¥ 3 BEBE gi¢ g8s2%, i gt : 2 : returned marked ‘De- pirtiaent ‘records indi- in the past: approximately t. of the applicants return- from Philadelphia, Pitts- Reading, Erie, Scranton and application now,” motorists. “It A Sima. ? Every person car this year must have 8 Remember 28% § 28 i burgh, i | takes | Why delay | to drive a | an | the pL is $2. countered on farm in the Commonwealth during the pest two i Ae continued in is Mo Fifth in total apple crop (fourth in value) Fifth in maple products Sixth in tame hay (third in value) Seventh in commerical apples, peaches and 5 Twelfth in COM Thirteenth in oa In the farm value of the twenty- two principal field crops, Pennsylva- nia ranks eleventh. | Valentine's the cream cheese; cowpuncher's Tenth In winter wheat and pears | FUR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT A women's counsel Is not much, but he that despises it is a fool.—Spanish. m to @ Hart Party on entings + said the invita- i i i i i | BF face. especially when the sz T ; i £5 i 2 g | £ § : gg 2 8 g = ge EF £5 da =EE 4 i £8 - i 55888 thi g § sf {| Though the girls were kept busy | 'roo for riders, they were allow- | ‘ed to enter the lassoing contest. | The boys stood in a row, holding | up right hands, and the girls, lined | throw a | loop of clothesline over some hand, thus making the owner of the hand ‘her partner. \ | The cow-punching announced was but a variation of the old donkey A cow's portrait was hung Wall, and. each person, blind- was allowed a try at pinning Winners were awarded paper rough-rider hats. | The rest of the evening was giv- | en over to dancing to a radio. Oc- up” started everybody into o that | order, and was a poli og sud- | den change of partners. ! Appropriately enough, the round- up was the assem ments. | ‘brown bread and punch | (ginger ale and grape juice); “hold- | up” ice cream served in little brown strong boxes of paper, and cake that “went fast.” i, ~The hostess who entertains in ‘honor of Saint Valentine will not {find it at all' difficult to serve ‘unique and delicious dishes, and the —Puffed Hearts—Meit one table- | spoonful of butter in a in one tablespoonful of flour, pour in slowly while constantly one the be % about 10 minutes iin a "hot | joven. Serve immediately. | a —Love in a Cabin—Pile i golden brown toast, two deep, (cabin fashion on the plates, and fill | with cream chicken; cover with strips jof the toast slightly bent to form make a white sauce by putting two ‘tablespoonfuls of butter in a sauce- 'pan, stirring until melted and bub- | bling; add two tablespoonfuls of | flour, mixed with one-fourth tea- i 2 = w g E 3 25 : ; Lil ; E : drain enough cucumbers to make a cupful and mix with one-half gup- \ful of canned sliced pineapple, which | SEE i est popularity years ago. seem to have lost bers. Not the least fhteresting of the Proj oa ‘valentines are vari. ous numerous packages filled ey a Hie Dab g engaged had z il 2 i i | } Bs £33 5 tg Hi 2 gd £38 i i § id £ Fof j B z - » ® - " i assortments Depart. ment of Forests and Waters con- cerning the freak out-of door condi. | tions brought about 1h ; if 3 i E hy oh ATE ih gif ih i hearts of pimento.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers