were: Mary stone FvT' T"'’ showing ^ ''- - T.,_ ’ I the route which led to the hidden Front row: Hilda May^ N^'^i'^nler^'lnirjo " T. Under The Peach Tree By Betty Stinnett o™m,i ,i,„ '^as annrn I ® I'est, on ?r Jiked Aircrafts Arnold ^as so m,i^!^ morning and everything pink petals 1°"*^ could hear the lazy iroe .t? '“'" "" '>i» Sidewalk lik i out over the pink lace Tl.l canopy of puffy aliout this i>- t- what Ila loved like this 0117*1/^”^^*^ Wock. On nights keautiful outl'**^ trees pink foam was ^Sainst a Itr moonlight setting of dark hliie sky. t^kore i’a 7r /’‘°“?kt that tin’s was “'is peS tre " ke kissed, under kliie and silv * fPreading pink on a jng tl.ere onTh'"“7 ®‘"nd- kranches niad^ ^ ®nlewalk where tlie ^ «>ade a lacework shadow. o, , —Tvwijv siianow. (1 told if * T 1 f"'l hotli of tl. “ to Mom *"iJ ‘took J«ok y^o’re want.7^ ?*?’ “’s kissing r^tilil he gla7^o k^arter know one thW 7 ‘ 'f Job; hut I ", flarn sio^ht nf ® ^md a place “,'"n a sidewalk? ^'""otic to do it in old daine’s 1, ” front of some nosey ‘»i"l HiouIXl l-l “t'"kt to havY •/“ ****“’ “A girl stone seat and a .g"*’‘len with a k"'*od in. Mavll in it, to get f/'V'k'k nioney^savo?”^^^ ''ave kou.se uS f t'« " yon can .L k ^"»-“on like tliat. like a girl „„ ■ f t kns.sed and engaged to"t iY7, ;\?’/^k well, plenty^ Ila nn- of that, yo„Ve young yet, ^‘^ke'wari'T,;! 7*""“ t^itk them hotl,. ‘‘•on; hut .s|w7 ,not ipiite nine- yoniiger. Ami after Ml" ‘ • >'®tti"g any “S you,nr ‘‘H’ nre man *ng yoiiinr fl,?* ^ i’ ^irls are marry- “onght, l?an r.r.„““yf’. Why, she * "*t 1 graduated with * V"k.of a one With who ,8111 mar- mar- [7] ried, and half of them have kids hv now But she dicln’t worry much about It. My time will come, she thought It wasnt that she didn’t ever have a date or hadn’t ever had a hoy in love with her or a man propose. Tim Carter would marry her any day of the week and he glad of the chance; hut she still thought his eyes looked like fish eyes. And she could never marry a man whose eyes looked like fish eves 110 matter how good he was otherwise.’ Jf 1 get tired of looking at him on a date, what would it he like all the tune. ()f course there were plenty of girls who would jump at the chance to marry Tim Carter. He was known as the town catch. But Ila Jackson re- seryed the right to throw hack into the ma rimonial pond any fish she caught and didn t care to keep. So she kept re jecting poor Timothy. And of course liere were the hoys she used to go to higl, school with. Most of then, were in service now and Ila dutifully wrote her s lare of letters to servicemen and her parlor never lacked company when one t them was home on leave. But she thought of them just as she did her brother Jack and treated them in ahout he same manner. So far Ila had never me a man that she wanted to kiss under the peach tree. She had thought cr !7,l Arnold Air- craft- that perhaps she might meet him there, the knight worth of kissing her under the peach tree’s pink he^ve? Some of then, had whistled at her and' Y?Ykee ? ^°“‘kern muscle men, yankec easy.jims’ the run of them shmft" ®'“y that they f ? re ker, with her small slim ie,ure, dressed ,n well-fittin«- well limed*^’ * *kirt, with her iyory nted oval face and silky dark l.aH 0 Ig )d h( ( >Wi ke in^ ade ar Per :s, iss I acl rial e p »seve lack) Moi ortal t. Jol fear nmein he Cl Presi iged lanne: of R( ■tn service of the nemorii urday watcl