The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 05, 1937, Image 7

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    Marriage May Reunite the House of Bourbon
Prince Alvaro of Bourbon, Orleans, and his bride, Carla Delflno Parodi, just after their marriage in the
Church of San Roberto Bellarmino in Rome. The wedding brought about the first formal appearance in six
years of former King Alfonso and former Queen Victoria of Spain, stimulating reports that they are con
sidering a reconciliation. They served as patrons for their cousin, Prince Bourbon-Orleans.
WILLIAMS’ PREXY
Dr. James Phinney Baxter III,
professor of history and master of
Adams house at Harvard university,
who was unanimously named to suc
ceed Dr. Tyler Dennett as president
of Williams college, at a recent
meeting of the executive committee
of the Williams board of trustees.
Forty-four years old, he takes office
September 1 as one of the youngest
of the ten men who have held the
presidency in the college’s history.
Famous Father and Two-Year-Old Son
An exclusive pose of John Jacob Astor and his two-year-old son,
William Henry Astor, as they appeared in commune, on the steps ol
“Chetwode,” their summer home at Newport, R. I. William Henry re
cently celebrated his second birthday with his dad and mother, the for
mer Ellen Tuck French.
Socialite Back From Wild Life Hunt
r
Bronzed George Vanderbilt, twenty-three-year-old socialite, pictured
aboard his yacht, Cressida, on his return from a 20,000-mile, six-month
cruise in the South Seas during which he gathered about 20,000 wild-life
specimens for the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences. George is
shown with Tag-Along, the tortoise-mascot he picked up on the Gala
pagos islands.
MOUND MARVEL
Atlea Richard Donald, youthful
pitching sensation of the Newark
club of the International league who
won his first 13 starts, shattering
all previous minor league records.
The future will probably see him
on the Yankee pitching staff since
the Newark club is part of the
Ruppert farm system.
Honorable Artillery Company Has Birthday
Sir George Broadbridge, the lord mayor of London, inspects the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company
of America during a garden party in honor of the British Honourable Artillery Company on the four hundredth
anniversary of its founding recently. The British company is one of the most exclusive regiments in England.
The American company dates from 1638 when a group of planters in America who had been members of the
British company formed a similar regiment.
I
Scenes and Persons in the Current News
1—The late Guglielmo Marconi, father of radio, who was accorded a state funeral by Italy following hit
death recently. 2—Secretary of Treasury Henry Morgenthau (left) shown with Arthur DeSousa Costa (cen
ter). and Secretary of State Cordell Hull following a conference in which the United States agreed to sell
$60,000,000 worth of gold to Brazil to aid the southern republic in bolstering its currency. 3—Chinese sol
diers typical of the troops now warring with Japanese soldiers in North China.
King Gustav Autographs a Stone
In tailoresque pose. King Gustav of Sweden is pictured seated on the
ground as he autographed the memorial stone placed outside the Gothen
burg water works during the recent celebration of its one hundred and
fiftieth anniversary.
NEW SENATE LEADER
Senator Alben Barkley of Ken
tucky, who was elected majority
leader of the senate to succeed the
late Senator Joseph T. Robinson of
Arkansas. He received 38 Democrat
ic votes in a close contest with Sena
tor Pat Harrison, who received 37.
STRATOSPHERE TESTER
Dr. Jean Piccard, famed strato
spherist who miraculously escaped
death when his ‘‘balloon cluster”
craft crashed flaming to earth near
Lansing, Iowa, after a takeoff from
Rochester, Minn. He estimated he
had reached 11,000 feet before start
ing his descent. The scientist was
carried on his flight by a double
cluster of 80 small balloons, one
cluster above the other.
Youngest Mother Has Second Baby
Mrs. Daniel Gonzales, thirteen years old, of Port Arthur, Texas, ac
claimed the youngest mother in the world 18 months ago, recently gave
birth to another baby. She is shown with Robert Lee (left), and Estella
Alice (right). The first baby was born in January, 1936, before the child
mother was twelve years old.
Trotters Show Speed in Grand Circuit Meet
Field of trotters in the second heat of the Tuxedo Purse race at Goshen, N. Y., recently, shown rounding
the turn with Freckles in the lead. Mr. Watts, however, got up a burst of speed to lead across the line. Freckles
ran second and Gunar thir'
Uneducated
Sally
By JANE OSBOHN
© McClure Newspaper Syndicate.
WNU Service.
• ‘HpHERE’S going to be a little
* dance of the College Women’s
club next Wednesday, Sally,” Rita
called excitedly over the telephone.
"And 1 wanted to know whether
your brother Tom and that nice
friend of his that’s staying with
him could come.”
"I’ll ask them,” Sally promised
politely but without much enthusi
asm.
"There’s a dear,” cried Rita.
"And do try to get them to come be
cause nice men are so scarce. I’d
love to ask you, too, dear, only not
belonging to the College Women’s
club, of course, you can’t come. I’m
awfully sorry, dear—”
"Nothing to be sorry for,” assured
Sally. "Good-by.”
Sally conveyed the invitation to
her brother Tom and Martin Gage,
who was spending a week with him.
They had both graduated from col
lege in June and Tom was spending
a few weeks of forced idleness be
fore the really good position which
he had secured in an engineer's
office was ready for him. Martin
Gage, whose patrimony made work
ing for a living not a real necessity,
was idling two months of the sum
mer.
"I suppose we might as well ac
cept.” said Tom. "I don't suppose
you're invited, Sally? Oh, well,
you’ll see more than you want of us
before that time.”
"Why isn't Sally invited?" asked
Martin Gage bluntly.
"Because she doesn’t belong,”
said Tom.
"Don’t let’s go without Sally,”
said Martin. "Why doesn’t she be
long?"
"Because I’m uneducated.”
laughed Sally. "Naturally they don’t
ask any girls that don’t belong to
the club, and naturally you can’t
belong to the club unless you’re a
college graduate.”
Martin gage would have
made further protest but for
the unannounced appearance of
Rita in the living room.
"Hello, Sally,” she said, looking
around with a smile and a toss of
her short golden hair. “Door was
open so I came in. Of course, you’re
coming to our dance?” she said con
fidently to the boys, and then going
SHORT SHORT
STORY
Complete in This Issue
across the room to Sally, and lay
ing a hand on her shoulders. “My
dear, I had to come right straight
over. I knew by your tone 1 had
offended you.” Her voice was low
ered, but not enough to make it
inaudible to Tom and Martin. “It’s
not your fault that you didn't go to>
college. Besides lots of girls aren't
cut out for that sort of thing. You’re
only twenty—you might have an op
portunity yet. I don’t know what I
said—but I just know you were
peeved. It isn’t our fault that we've
had educational advantages.”
Somehow Tom managed to change
the subject.
But Wednesday night when Tom
and Martin Gage went to the Col
lege Women’s club dance Sally did
feel a species of dejection. Martin
protested to the last that he did nob
want to go.
“I really think Sally was an
noyed," Martin told Tom. “But I
don’t see why she should be. She
didn’t want to go to college or she
would have gone. A girl as clever
as Sally is would have found it a
cinch.”
“That’s just it,” said Tom, a trifle
embarrassed himself. "There
Wasn’t enough money for both of us
to go through college—and Sally
made up her mind that I should
have the advantage. She felt that it
was more important for a boy than
a girl, and in a way I suppose she
was right. I made up my mind I'd
make up to her later.”
** t*13* that stupid
** Rita talked the way she did,”
stormed Martin. “It makes me
boil.”
A week later when Martin Gage
was about to terminate his sojourn
with Tom he found Sally alone read
ing in the garden under the lilac
hedge.
“I want to marry you,” he told
her. “I don’t know whether you’ll
have me. Perhaps you don’t feel as
I do about it.”
“I think I love you,” Sally said,
“and I think I’ll marry you—if you
want me to.” There was quite a
long silence in which Martin re
spectfully stroked Sally's hand. “At
first when you came I knew I liked
you, but then Rita seemed to be so
taken with you and you went to the
dance and—well, I decided that I
was too uneducated for you. I wasn’t
going to stand in the way of you
and Rita. Then I heard what you
said to Tom about college women.
I really couldn’t help hearing. And
then I knew that you probably
wouldn’t want to marry Rita any
way and that you wouldn't feel
ashamed of me just because I hadn’t
had educational advantages.”
“Bless me,” said Martin. “So you
overheard what I said to Tom?
You’re a wicked eavesdropper, Sal
ly. but I love you just the same.”