CHAPTER VIII By the last week in July Mr. Busby was next to finished at the Radcliffe house. There were only the loose ends to be tucked in. Janet began uneasily to wonder what would happen next. She had after considerable research decid ed on exactly what furnishings the old mansion required. She had the names of dealers and prices at her tongue’s end, as well as neatly put down in a slender red note book for Tony Ryan’s consider ation. Deke had been engaged for sev eial days in carefully weeding out the flower beds at the sides of the Radcliffe mansion. It was work at which he could sit down if his leg troubled him. The business of pruning the trees and cutting back the heavy shrubbery was to be left to Rufe under the supervision of the Earl of Jer sey, so Deke said. “Mr. Tony knows I can’t han die no scythe,” chuckled Deke, but he promised to skin me alive if I missed ary weed in these here flower beds. Mr. Tony can’t stand nothing sloverny.” Janet’s lips curled. “He ex pects you to earn your keep, does he?” “Yas’m nothing like being able to eat your cake and have it too,” she remarked. “I mean, it isn’t everyone who can make a beau tiful gesture pay.” “Yas’m,” agreed Deke doubt fully. He had no idea what she was talking about, but the man who had come up behind her knew. ■“I’ve seen the skids put under too many Good Time Charlies to let that happen to me,” said Tony Ryan in a hard voice. Janet turned with a little gasp. He had come in through the rear gate. Under the dark tan of his lean cheeks there was a red glow . like the dusky flush on a copper vase. “I’d like if possible to have the house ready for occupancy by the twentieth of August,” he said. “Please buy what you think the ^ house needs and have them send k the bills to me,” he said crisply. She winced, and her old antago nism flared up. “The price is no object, naturally?” she asked. He gave her a curious glance. ‘‘I want the best.” f * * * Theoretically, after she had been busy at the office for eight hours, Berenice should have been Church Appointments SPARTA METHODIST CHURCH L. F. Strader, Minister Sunday School every Son. at-10 Charles R. Roe, Supt. Church service, 1st ft 3rd Sun, 11 Epworth League every Sun. 6:80 Hazel Tompkins, Pres. SPARTA CIRCUIT SERVICES 8hHoh, Second Sunday at 11 o’c. Piney Creek, 2nd Sun. at 8 o’c. Gentry Chapel, 1st Sun. at 2 o’c. .Walnut Branch, 3rd Sun. at 8 o’c. •ox's Chapel, 4th Sun. at 11 o’c. Potato Creek, 4th Sun. at 3 o’c. SPARTA PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH R. L. Berry, Minister Church service, 2nd Sun. at 7:15. Church service 4th Sun. at 11 o’e. Glade Valley, 1st Sun. 11 ft 7:15. Glade Valley, 2nd Sun. at 11 o’e. Glade Valley, 3rd Sun. 11 ft 7:16. Rocky Ridge, 2nd Sun. at 3 o’c. Rocky Ridge, 3rd Sun. at 3 o’c. SPARTA BAPTIST CHURCH (Meeting in Presbyterian Church) Sunday School every Sun. at 9:45 Amos Wagoner, Acting Supt. Church Wervice, 2nd ft 4th Sun. 11 Baptist Tr. Union ev*y Sun. 6:80 PRIMITIVE BAPTIST CHURCH C. B. Kilby — S. G. Caudill Pastors Church service, 3rd Sat. and Sun. In each month, at 11 o’c. REGULAR BAPTIST CHURCHES of Littla River Aon. Big Springs, 2nd Sat. and San. Doable Spring, 1st Sat. and San. Landmark, 4th Sat. and San. Laurel Glen, 1st Sat and San. Mountain View, Srd Sat and Son. Mt. Ararat, 4th Sat. and Son. Mt Carmel, 8rd Sat and San. Mt Olivet 1st Sat and Son. New Bethel, Srd Sat and Son. New Salem, 2nd Sat and San. Pleasant Home, 8rd Sat and San. Prather’s Creek, 2nd Sat A Sun. Roaring Gap, 1st Sat and Sun. Saddle Mountain, 4th Sat A Sun. South Fork, 4th Sat and Sun. UNION BAPTIST ASS’N. Regular Church Services Cherry Lane, 4th Sat and Sun. Glade Creek, 1st Sat. and Sun Liberty, 2nd Sat and Sun. Mount Union, 1st Sat. and Sun. Pleasant Grove, 8rd Sat and Sun. Saddle Mtn., 8rd Sat. and Sun. Whitehead, 2nd Sat and Sun. Welcome Home, 4th Sat and Sun. .... ..xm. satisfied to stay quietly at home with Bill at night, only it had not worked out that way. She was generally tired by five and more and more inclined to feel sorry for herself because her friends had been doing nothing all day except play bridge or otherwise amuse themselves. She formed the habit of stopping in at one of their apartments after work. Usually The Bunch was to gether somewhere having cock tails. They encouraged her to join them.v When she came into the apart ment that afternoon Bill was slamming things around in the kitchenette. “Hullo,” he said without looking up, his face like a thundercloud. “Hullo,” said Berenice coldly, going into the dressing room to put her hat and gloves away. The living room needed clear ing of cigarette butts and scatter ed newspapers. as I can climb into my best bib.” * * * When Berenice let herself back into the apartment a little after two Bill was there asleep on his side of the bed. She closed the dressing room door cautiously before she started to undress. Her hands were not quite steady and her eyes did not focus correctly. That was how she happened to pull open Bill’s drawer instead of her own in the chifforobe. That was why she did not at once recognize the stack of neatly cut out pic tures which lay on Bill’s pile of handkerchiefs. The local newspaper had been running a contest for eight weeks. Each day they published a pic ture puzzle. There was a grand prize of five thousand dollars and a second of a thousand and a third of five hundred and forty of five dollars each. Berenice had never dreamed Bill was working “The price is no object, naturally?” she asked “Come and get it,” called Bill from the dinette. “Have you thought any more about going to the Fair with the bunch?” she asked after a while. “For Pete’s sake,” he protested, “what is there to think about? I can’t afford a jaunt like that and you know it!” She meant to be generous, her heart was full of tenderness when she said, “I have money enough in the bank to pay our expenses to the Fair, Bill, if you’ll go.” He started to his feet so vio lently she dropped her fork. “What are you trying to make out of me?” he cried in a tor tured voice. “A gigolo?” Berenice’s cheeks flamed. “It’s like you to be that unjust,” she said. “Has it occurred to you that after I’ve pounded the type writer from nine to five I’m not exactly in the mood to be shouted at the rest of the night?” she demanded. Bill’s mouth tightened. “Maybe you think I’m crazy about com ing home to this sort of thing when I’ve tramped the streets all day trying to sell advertising?” “Is that why you’re not so hot at it?” she asked stingingly. He picked his hat up from where he had flung it down on I the littered desk. He did not ! speak or glance back as he jerked open the door and banged it be hind him. Berenice stood very still, listening to his retreating steps. Suppose Bill did not come back? She had a longing to run to her mother, to hide her head in Anne’s lap as she had done when a child if she had had a night mare or been frightened at some thing. She had stretched out her hand to take up the telephone when it rang. Berenice had meant to call Anne and ask if she could come over, but May was on the wire. “Meet us down in the lobby, kid. You and Bill are riding in our car.” “Bill isn’t here," stammered Berenice, trying to conceal that she was crying. “We had one of our famous battles and he walked out on me.” “He’ll be back,” said May with a hearty laugh, “Surely you aren’t going to give him the satisfaction of staying at home and moping. That’s exactly what he’d like.” Berenice’s round childish chin hardened. “All right,” she said, “I’ll meet you downstairs as soon Reins-Sturdivant Funeral Home Licensed Funeral Directors and Embalmers SPARTA, N. 0. it the contest. Yet there were ;he pictures pains-takingly puzzled sut and lettered in Bill’s small cramped printing. Berenice’s heart ached. He had secured duplicate of aach puzzle so that the set he finally sent in should be neat and legible. These were the ones he had worked from. They were almost tattered where he had written in and then rubbed out and rewritten his answers. In spots the cheap ragged paper had been worn through in holes from his patient eraser. “Oh, poor Bill!” Berenice whis pered to herself. For all the pictures were torn in half and in the waste basket beside the chifforobe lay a crumpl ed newspaper. Berenice picked it up with shaking hands. There were the names of the winning contestants. The winner of the grand prize headed them all in huge black letters, the second in smaller type, the third in still smaller print, and at the bottom the inconspicuous column of forty who received five dollars each. Berenice’s trembling finger ran down the list. Bill had not re ceived a prize, not any at all. His name did not appear anywhere on the page. Berenice felt an anguish of pity. She knew why Bill had wanted five thousand dollars, why he had clutched at this forlorn hope to save his self respect, but he had failed. “Oh, Bill!” whispered Berenice, crawling into bed beside him and putting her arm across him. But even in his sleep he flinch ed away from her. * * * Gradually the stately old house began again to take on a gracious and gleaming aspect. Worn floors and wainscoting developed a satin sheen. In the dining room a Sheraton table and white leath er-seated chairs rested on a hand woven blue rug. Upstairs, prim ruffled white curtains framed the windows of bedrooms in which there were mahogany four-poster beds and slipper chairs and chintz covered chaise longues. “Almost finished,” breathed J Janet one, sultry afternoon toward j the middle of August. “The soon |er I get away from here the bet iter. The first thing I know I’ll be breaking down and sobbing on the interloper’s hearth rug.” A man stood at the foot of the stairs. “I’m sorry,” he said. “I didn’t mean to startle you.” He was a slight man, thin for his height. He looked to be about forty-five and his expensively tai lored gray suit was a little shiny at the seams. “You are Miss Phillips, of course,” he went on. “I’m Steve Hill, a friend of Tony’s. He’s done me a great service by being alive.” The next afternoon he was in the library when she arrived, sitting on the cushioned window seat, turning the leaves of an exceptionally fine copy of Tristan and Isolde. “Allah be praised, you don’t buy books for the color of their bindings!” he said. Janet stared at him critically as he talked on. He did not sound like a bum, but neither did the Earl of Jersey. Steve Hill had a sensitive mobile face, and he seemed to have read everything worth reading and to have seen everything worth seeing and to have known everything worth knowing, “Sorry,” he said, glancing ab ruptly .at his watch, “I’m afraid I’ve bored you.” She discovered with an incredu lous start that they had been sit ting there for an hour while he literally charmed her with the gently satirical flow of his con versation. “No,” she said, “you haven’t bored me. I doubt if you ever bored anyone in your life.” To her dismay his mouth twist ed with pain. “I failed lament ably with the one audience in the world which mattered to me,” he said and walked quickly away as if a horde of tormenting memories had been loosed about him. But he was back again the next afternoon. Janet was hanging pictures. “Nothing’s lacking,” she told Steve Hill, “except the portrait of my great-grandmother which is in our living room at home. It be longs here, commanding the whole house,” she indicated the space opposite the wide staircase and the entrance to the library. “But nothing could persuade us to part with it.” She laughed unsteadily. “There are some things you can’t put on the auction block unless it’s a matter of life and death. At least we’ve managed to eat with out pawning great-grandmother.” She regarded him defiantly. “A bit of maudlin sentiment, eh, what? as the Earl of Jersey would say.” Steve Hill smiled. “There was a time when I thought I’d out grown the old gods, but that’s merely a phase, you know. In the end you realize that life with out sentiment is a wine without bouquet.” She caught her breath. “I’d like you to know my mother,” she said, and blushed because un til then she had not known she approved of him to that extent. “Would you like to go home with me tonight to dinner? It’ll be informal. We live in a flat and we can’t entertain on an elaborate scale, but Mother’s the only person I know of in this town who could talk to you about books and philosophy and poetry and hold her own. You see, she grew up in a library like this.” “I’ll be delighted,” he said. (To Be Continued) Wait, A MINUTE! We want copies of The Star, The Alleghany Star, and The Alleghany Times, published before 1933. For the oldest copy of each paper in Volume One delivered to us before June 20 we will pay One Dollar. • W. S. MEAD - STAR-TIMES opposite Post Office — Sparta '.s iva.. . Maple Shade Maple Shade, May 13.—Mr. and Mrs. Vester Peak, of West Vir ginia, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Hix Halsey Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Halsey, Fox, visited in the home of Ahart Halsey Sunday. Misses Grace Kirk and Winnie Hash, teachers of the Mill Creek School at Rugby, spent the week end at home. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Landreth, Sparta, were dinner guests of Mrs. Mae Halsey, Saturday. * Miss Reka Paisley was a busi ness visitor at Independence Fri day. Miss Lessie Lee Halsey spent Saturday night and Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Halsey. Mrs. C. M. DeRord has been ill for the past wreek. Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Cox were visitors in the home of Jack Halsey Sunday afternoon. Reka Paisley spent Saturday night with Helen Rose. Mrs. G. W. Kirk, who has been ill since October, has im proved considerably. Mrs. Nannie Parsons and daughter, Aileen, spent Sunday of last week with Miss Maxine Par sons, of Turkey Knob. Miss Bettie Halsey, of Sparta, spent the week-end with home folks here. A Mother’s Day program was given here Sunday by the Sunday school. The pageant, “Let’s Give Mother a Rest”, by four girls and three boys, and a reading, “Jesus, Lover of My Soul,” by Mrs. W. M. Paisley. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Delp and children spent Sunday with Mr. j and Mrs. A. C. Delp. Dr. and Mrs. Mont Cox and j children, of Independence, were I visiting in this community Sun-j day. H. L. Shaver, Jr., of Winston- j Salem, visited his uncle, Dewey! Cox, Sunday. , i Mrs. Mamie Delp was a visitor ; in Sparta Saturday. C. E. Cox was in Galax Sunday to hear Dr. Bob Shuler. Miss Gertrude Mooney, of Mouth of Wilson, spent Sunday with friends here. Cecil Halsey, of Fox, visited in the A. J. Halsey home Sunday. “CALLING ALL DRIVEJRS” You always have time to drive safely. A show-off at the wheel often shows up at the hospital. Observe the rules when passing schools. Another highway enemy: the can’t wait driver. SPEAKING OF NECESSITIES Certain items appear on every . shopping list, Here is one that I is as important as any other. ; The Star-Times offers a year’s I subscription PLUS a year’s sub scription to PATHFINDER—the news magazine with more than a million subscribers—for the small price of $1.30. It’s the best bar gain you will find anywhere. Send your order now and be among the best informed in your neigh borhood. Call us now before you have started to do the housework and you will know the day has started right. Skilled WATCH ^ _ REPAIRING on fin* WATCHES All work fur> an teed. Low* est price*. See "our line of Jewelry. ALLEGHANY WATCH CO. Sparta, N. C. [Four young people go as delegates from N. C. to the —National 4-H Club camp in Washington, D. C., June 12-19. They are Rudolph Ellis, of Fay etteville who entered 4-H Club work four years ago and is now making a name for himself in his own peanut industry; Alfred Greene, Durham County, who has been in the club for nine years and has completed projects with pigs, com, poultry and garden ing. The two girls to attend this club camp are Margaret Ellis, Durham County, now serving as president of the State council, having been a member for nine years and completed projects in clothing, food preparation, room improvement, poultry, home beau tification, and gardening, tification, and gardening, and Sue Parker, of Jones County, who has held prominent offices in her club during her six years of mem bership. Citron Citron, May 14.—Robert Fend er, candidate for House of Repre sentatives, was in this communi ty Monday. R. G. Taylor and Wilmer Fend er made a business trip to North Wilkesboro Monday. Mrs. Dayton Dixon is slowly improving. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Taylor and son were in this community Sunday, visiting his old home place. Mrs. Carrie Hamm Jones and son, Jimmy, spent the week-end with her brother and sister-in-law, Rev. and Mrs. W. M. Hamm. Dare and Lena Sheets, Atheleen j and Iva Grace Hoppers visited ' Mrs. Edith Taylor Saturday. A large crowd atended Moth- [ -—---I Sparta Bus Schedule | GREYHOUND Detroit and Pittsburgh to Miami! Lv. Sparta, northb’nd, 10:45 a.m. Lv. Sparta, southb’nd, 3:15 p. m. Fro Boone & W. Jeff’son, ar. 2 pan. To ” ” ” » lv. 3:15 p.m. N. Wilkesboro & Statesville Bus To ” & Stat’ville, lv. 9:45 ajn. From N. Wilkesboro, ar. 3:00 p.m. To ” & Stat’ville, lv. 5.10 pan. From N. Wilkesboro, ar. 10:80 p.m. era Day services at Pine Fork Church Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Carlie Osborne visited the home of R. G. Taylor Tuesday. More than 225,000 children ifti der 15 years of age were injured in traffic accidents last year. MODERN TEAM WORK Believing in team work and giving the greatest news service possible to our readers, the Star Times now offers the last word in such service. For a limited time only, we are offering a year’s subscription to our paper PLUS a year’s subscription to PATHFINDER, the Nation’s most widely read news magazine, for the small amount of J1.30. Act at once so that you may be among the intelligent people who al ready enjoy this offer. II CALLING To Tell You About The New SANITARY LAUNDRY just opened for Sparta and Independence. They will call Tuesdays and Thursdays, to oollect and deliver your work. Sanitary Laundry INDEPENDENCE D. W. MOTOR CO. — SPARTA ’39 Dodge, 4-door, practically new, well cared for, very low mileage. ’40 Ford, 2-door, almost new, only 4,000 miles. ’39 Ford Coupe .... $450 ’37 Ford Coupe. ’31 Ford, Model A ... $100 ’31 Ford, Model A Pick-up. Bargain. ’36 Ford V-8 Pick-up ..... $195 ’35 Chevrolet Truck—114-ton—fair. ’39 Dodge Truck, clean, low mileage. D. W. MOTOR CO. - SPARTA THE HOUSE OF HAZARDS BY MAC ARTHUR tiWAT'S ms- a X t novum mm?. ssiSSk -> iHS 'W' 125 V you KNOW THAT GAMBLING /s ONE THIN6 I ^ DON'T WANT OUR CHILDREN TO EVER INDULGE M IN... AN' YOU PERMIT A GAMBLING DEVICE RI6HT IN OUR HOME— ETC., ETC V _^ fVi/