Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 3 April 1915 — Page 3
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'a,bRIL 3, 1915.
-JOT FOUND TT IN PLENTY
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He Forgot to Take Notes,
vv«w Now He's In Straits With Flock and Girl.
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|.\GO. April 3.—Klder 1. B. •of the Brethren chuivH "was ns local color so rapidly while ing and celebrating through
V-ones of gayety with Miss Maxwell, a cabaret singer, onths ago that he did not to nuke copious and comof all he saw. ri done so the suspicions of is of the Brethren Sunday ®d might not have been to the real purpose of his
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Trout was unable to promotes as evidence, and as a -is no longer Sunday school the Teachers' monthly of r*en Publishing: company tn secretary of the
Sunday school boardj and the Brethren church at a poet he had held for n. positions bf haa lost, a-nrf
@1 "worse the pretty Mdnger has threatened to sue 1 $2a,Q©0 for defaana-tion of _J because the elder says he Sil j|d with her, not for the pleas|S uplift of her company, but
Vet a few more facts concernmderworld. She asserts that j' $ her passionately far five
J«d estranged her from a young i|e«i to \Vham she say® she was
runkful of Letters.
iMaxweH's ^-attorneys have been truxikful of letters addressed Arl in the former pastor's hand-
All are signed "R. X. Benit was as such that the b.er fifty-year-old admirer. that sometimes she received than five letters a day. all breathing tenderest passion, girl's lawyers would give out one of these letters for publica,Vi. The others will follow at "the *per time."' they say. Here is the jt ^er" L_ Dear Florence—Sweetheart, this is list to toll you how much I enjoyed be time last riit-ht. Our dinner at ollins" and the time spent in the Ver-
were to me the most enjoyable of rrv time we have been together. Florence, you were so yweet r«nd pleasant ,'ia.t it haunto me like a dream! But. jctter, it was not a dream- It was i.-al. "5urt, we did' not get back at 10 Seloek. but we were so good and
ai! the time, and I h©ie no one •olded you for not returning earlier, yes, 1 a. ni. is earlier tiian 16 p. m.
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6
At! 4tame.
AUine, Alone,
"Mere are— MV THOUGHTS OF THEE.
i«e: Jv?ne! All, all alosie' Along with thoughts and thee. tongue can speak nor fancy seek The though tfiat come to me.
-W'ilti the lilies at my fceeti
iT*§ro sweeter they than thee. Pi'my heart's thought that kn-o^reth St naught ^,ejut trust in the bliss to be.
With the n'oonlight shirnrtsg full On ^yes that love enthrone. love fail me. ah—better be That I were ever alone! ST. B. R. '•Florence. I am so anxious to tell a number of tilings I have wanted tell yi.u for several weeks with no V! ground but we tw«. Will I never itet this chance? Wbt-n I get back from sfce east I must have it. Goodby, girlie, i-ith love, "N. R. BE^ETT"
While the elder would not comment %i this letter, he reaffirmed thai all .j^ould be cleared up in time, that his *"3oeial Menaces." was being tshed to completion, and thai when ^vas on the market people would
Serstand why he had associated with girl. jWhen I started out I decided not to reraJ months ago I planned to «o
Chicago, and gather my material hand," said Elder Trout. "The be written in clean language be uplifting. iVhan I started oat I decoded not to 1 acyone of my plans' while gathkig my material/' _A member of the Sunday school
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jard who would not permit his name be used disclosed some of the cLe-. -bia^ils of the whole affair when informlicatfi that Elder Trout maintained his
^age^"Dicl he teil you about the ajitoniohjs le trips with a certain young wombjan' a^ed. "Did he tell you his !in .fe did not even know of his trips? have^ be mention a photograph of the 5utjung woman with her arms about botfdP1
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beer garden? Did
jjup say he had bought piumes ajid r^-+hes and other articles of ciothing erJInPt.^g y0iJng- woman and had written lcalera to her?
ht I en. IMd he mention the coofctaHs £^S?"0~!rchaj6ed for her?:
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vtaaiow te Cure Rheumatism Sosgh Here is a prc«cri jtion for rhe-um^inm sited to he mixed at home) used aH over 3* upd1
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A the f^ureat known remedy neutral'T ,?s.acid in the Wood^frtTsfiv'ea results is first dose. "i3ne o««^e of Ton a •H'oth Impound and on^ouflce syrup of Sarlid Jparilla. Put ffiese two ingredient# jn if pint of wHfiskey. Use a tablespoon°n nil before^nfK-als and at bed time." Oct fie rtisjRgdififfU at any drug store. Genuine agrrej"^0™'53
in one
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0.000 he last tathlans, far.n in 17 °»ce i-ambs' March"
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£££r/MR PIANO CO.
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Charge of Malfeasance In Offioe Added to That of Bribery— Other Officials Accused.
Cabaret Girl Wants $25,000 of Pastor He Wooed Her to Get "Color" for Book
MAYOR
ON NEW INDICTMENTS
Is
MUJSCIE, IncL. Aj?ril 3.—An indictment, charging malfeasance, in office, was returned by the Delaware county grand jury late yesterday against Mayor Rollin H. Bunch. He wao arrested and released on SI,000 bond.
The indictment is the culmination of a grand jury investigation which has been under way for several weeks. True bills, charging the acceptance of bribes, have been returned against Mayor Bunch and members of the city administration, but the malfeasance charge caused a greater sensation than any of the others.
On conviction, the Indiana statute requires that the mayor be removed from office. The Indictment charges Mayor Bunch conspired and agreed with Deputy Prosecutor Gene Williams, Chief of Police "William A. Mcllvaine and Herb Mac ty, president of the rolice board, to prevent the enforcement of criminal laws and alleges that Mayor Bunch and his alleged co-coosjwratora demanded bribes as protection money from proprietors of twenty houses of ill fame, twenty-five gambling rooms, owners of fifty slot machines and operators off seventy-five blind tigers.
A second count charges a majority
When Mrs. Morton entered her son's office it lacked half an hour of eloemg time. Dick and Miss Rudolph sat close together, their heads bent over a paper spread oa the desk. As she stood a second, Miss R«dolph raised her eyes and gazed into his fa/je. a flLerce .^nort made them both start a^id Dkik rose, surprised and f:oniideraJ3ly fussed, and came forward to speak. "Why, how do you liappen to he here? Is NaH wkft you?'' he asked. "No, came o»it for a waik and (hoaght I'd go ba/:k with yo«. Don't lei. rue interrupt your work," she continued, as Mikn Rudolph began folding up the papers and packing them away. "Oh, it's near quitting time. 'We can ieaAe them 'till tomorrow. I'll see ParKong about a little matter, then I'll foe ready to go. Kxcuse me,'1 and he was gone.
Miss Rudolph cleared the desk and was reaching for her heat and parasol whr-n the old lady burst ont "DM you know, young woman, that you are getting yourself talked ahout by continually walking the street with my son?" "Whjk, no," sair] the Kirl, turning great Innocent eyes on her aeouser. "Did Mrs. Norton nay tba^?" "Mrs. Norton is 110 gossip and listens to none, so the head gossip came to me with the news," replied the old lady. "Really, one can do nothing without having remarks made in a tiny village." Miss Rudolph was boring holes In the floor with her parasol. "ICven in a village where all one's
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of the police board are destitute of moral character and that they are Jknown law violators and in sympathy with law violation. There are twentytwo witnesses on the indictment against Mayor Bunch. The list includes three Muncie attorneys, one patrolman and one detective of the police department two elgar store, proprietors the prosecuting witness to an indictment charging the mayor with accepting a bribe for an elleged privilege of operating a blind tiger and the prosecuting witness in a number of reoent indictments, charging the mayor and the deputy prosecuting attorney with accepting bribes.
STRIKING MINERS TO FARM.
Ohfoant Accept Offers By Farmers of Use of Land. BEIDOEPORT, O.. April 3.—Striking miner* of the east Ohio coal field, who have had no work for more than a year, are preparing to farm the hillsides of Belmont county that have been placed at their disposal by friendly
farmers. Officers of the union today depatched a letter to the department of agriculture in Washington asking the government to donaf* garden seed. The miners believe that by raising beans, peas, pota.tees, tomatoes, corn, onions, etc., to which the land Js well adapted, they will be able to use more of the money allowed by the union for clothing and other necessities.
Gltmpses^Mearied Ltfel
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affairs are known, no girt who goes quietly about her business is talked about. A giri's reputation is her most precious possession. It doesn't pay to trifle with it." At this point Dick returned, Miss Rudolph said "Good night." and went ont.
Dick looked from one to the other and thought he smelled gunpowder. However, one could judge nothing from his mother's inscrutable face.
Wt^en they wers on the sidewalk she said, "T had a. call from one of your friends this afternoon. Nell was downtown, so tlue impudent bagga^** unburdened herself to me." "Who was it?" asked Dick in surprise. "Mrs. Eilson." His mother fixed her sharp eyos on Dick. "T thought you were grown up and knew beter tham to go parading tlie streets every day with a silly girl and net all the idle tongues in the vmago wagging." "So they've loosed the dogs of war, have they, to hunt me to cover? What did Noll say? Did she send you here to reclaim me." His eyes shot fire and an angry color was in his fa^ee.
His mother stopped in the middie or the sidewalk a.pd loked at him. "Do I look like a. child to be sent on an errand?" she snapped. "Nell known nothing about this. She was not at home and it's to save her from knowing that I came. She's a. good little thing and you shan't act the fool and make her suffer about that silly girl." "You talk as Sf wpre ten years old. Ton can't realize th?it I'm grown up.'*
Hhe looked at him with withering scorn. 'Perhaps 1 might if you would act grown up." "Look here, mother, I am a man and perfectly capable of managing my own affairs. The days of your interference are past," he flamed. "Well, I've told that silly little fool her reputation ai stake. Maybe she wlfl care for It, If jrou are not man enough to do it for her." And they walked home In silence.
TERltE HAUTE TBiliUJN
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Mug ttw •etting-down of a romeirtie chronicl* *f th« raeMntir of Hit princ* and tho t*dght«r of an AmartMit milllonairo and tha raKMpkabla chain of avanits that f«How««L
CHAPTER XX—Continued. "Not" orled Badelia, aghast. "I—I cannot permit it, Mr. Schmidt. Can't you understand? You—you are the man with whom I am supposed to be carrying on atrociously. What could be more convicting than to be discovered racing over a mountain pass— Oh, it is not to be considered—not for an instant." "Well, I can tell you flatly just what I Intend to do," said he, setting his jaws. "I shall hir» another car and keep you in sight every foot of the way. You may be able to elude the greatest detective agency 1n Durope, but you can't gel. away from me, I intend to keep you now that I've got you, Bedelia. You can't shake me off. Where you go. I go." "Do you mean she cried, a new thrill in her voice. l-fe looked deep Into her eve« and read there a. message that invited him to perform vast though l'ool-hardy deeds. Her eyes were suddenly sweet with the love she had newt- pxpecteri to know: her lips trembled with the longing for kisses "I shall travel far," Hhe murmured. "You may find the task an arduous one—keeping up with me, I mea.11." "I am young and strong," he said, "and, if God is.good to me, I shall live for fifty years to come, or even longer. I tingle with joy, Bedelia, when I think of being near 011 for fifty years or more. Have—have you thought of It in thai light? 've you looked ahead and said to yourself: fifty years have I to live and all of them with—" "Hush! I was speaking of a week's journey, not of a, life's voyage, Mr. Schmidt," she said, her fa^e .suffused. "1 was speaking of a. honeymoon," said he, and then remembered Mrs. Gaston. 'She was leaning back in her chair, smiling benignly. He had an uncomfortable thought: was he walking into a trap net for him by this clever woman? Had she a.n ulterior motive in advancing his cauwe? "But it would be perfectly silly of you to follow me in a car," said Bedelia, trying to regain her lost composure. "Perfectly silly, wouldn't it. Mrs. Gaston "Perfectly," said Mrs. Gaston. 1
"I will promise to see you in Vienna—" "I intend to see you every day," he d»clared, "frewn now till the end of time." "Really, Mr. Schmidt, you—" "If there is one thing 1 despise beyond all reason. Bedelia, it is the name of 'Schmidt'! I wish you wouldn't call me by that name." "I can't just call you 'mister,'" she demurred. "Call me Rex for the present," said he. "I will supply you with a better one later on." "May I call him Rex?" she I mi I red of her companion. "In moderation," said Mrs. Gaslon. "Very well, then, Ilex. 1 have changed my mind. I shall not cross the Drunlg by motor since you insist upon risking your neck in pursuit of me. I shall go by train in the morning,— oalmly, complacently, stupidly by train. Instead of a thrilling dash for liberty over rocky heights and through perilous gorges, shall travol like any bourgeoise—in a second or third cla.*s carriage, and the only thrill I shall have will be when we stop for Baker's ehouolate at the top of the |ass. By that time 1 erpeet to be sufficiently hungry to be thrilled even by the sight of a cake of chocolate. Will you travel in the carriage behind me? I fancy it will be safe and convenient and you can't possibly be far from my heels." "That's a sensible idea.", he cried. "And we may be able to accommodate your other pursuers' on the same train. What's the sense of leaving them behind'* They'd only catch us up In the end, so we might just as well take them along with us." "No. We will keep well ahead of tnem. I insist on that. They can't get here before to-morrow afternoon, so we will be far in the lead. We will be in Vienna, in two days. There I shall say good-bye to you, for am going on beyond. I am going to Graustark, the new Blithers estate. Surely you will not follow me there." "You are very much mistaken. I shall there as soon as you ani I shal' just as long, provided Ir. Bill tias no o-bjeoUous," said Re in.
Make the guest room a rest room!
Puts you
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with more calmness than he had hoped to display in the face of her sudden thrust. "We are forgetting our dinner," said Mrs. Gaston quietly. "I think the waiter is ®--snoved."
CHAPTER XXI
MR. BLITHERS ARRIVES IN GRAU'STARK ''o, Mr. William W. Blithers arrived In Edelweiss, the capital of Graustark, on the same day that the prince returned from his tour of the world. As a matter of fact, he traveled by special train and beat the prince home by the matter of three hours. The procession of troops, headed by the royal castle guard, it was announced would pass the historic hotel Regengetz at five in the afternoon, so Mr. Blithers had front seats on the extension porch facing the PlRta.
He did not know It, but if h® had waited for the regular train I11 Vienna, he would have had the honour of traveling in the same railway carriage with the royal young man. ("Would" Is used advisedly In the place of "might," for he would have traveled in it, ycito may be sure.)
Moreover, he erred in another particular, for arri\ing at the same instant and virtually arm-in-arm with the country's sovereign, he oould hardly have been kepi out of the procession itself. When you stop to think that next to the prince he was the most important personage In the relm on this day of celebration. It ought not to be considered at all unreasonable for htm to have expected some notable attention, such as being placed in the first carriage Immediately behind the country's sovereign, or possibly on the seat facing hi:n. Missing an opportunity like this, wasn't at all Mr. Blithers' idea of success. He was very sorry about the special train. If it hadn't been for that train he might now be preparing to ride castleward.s behind a royal band instead of sifting with his wife in the front row of seats on a hotel porch, just like a regular guest, waiting for the parade to come along. It certainly tkras a. wasted opportunity.
ijFair ....
He had lost 110 time In his dash across th« continent. In the first place, his agents in Paris made It quite clear to him that there was likely to be lrlpl. .evened 4 "ruction in Graustark over the loan Double acreaaed and th irospect of a plebeian prlnceSB being ated on the throne whether! *1*1' l'nm/i" the liked it or not: and in the
sec ilace, Maud Applegate had left tl his desk in tlie Paris office®, fiprining him that she wqws like
«, 'aturee. Pair and warmerj? pMss easing cloudinr '•raiUMS,
...
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care-taking, safety, and
ly to turn up in Edelweiss aim soon as he. She added an postscript. She said she was to see what sort of a place it he had been wasting his moi
To say that he was put Maud's aggravating behaviour be stating the case with £5 gentleness. He was furious. for the head of the detective! and gave him a blowing upwas never to forget. It apjp^ the detectives had followed a fa and had been fooled by the war in a most humiliating manner, hadn't the remotest notion^ mjrwas, and evinced great suyw informed in a voice loud ei heard a half-block that she way to Graustark. They said be possible, and he said know what they were talk He was done with them. step out and ask the cash^ them a check for their se\-v so on and so forth. He did to notify them that they wer^ of loafers.
Then he dragged Mrs. Blitl^ to the Gare de 1'Bste and took ii press to Vienna- He would see'j loan first and to Maud afterwa 1
He had no means of knowing certain Miss Guile was doing riiapa the destiny of the prtr of Graustark than all the mm had poured into its treasury, he the faintest suspicion that even then on Graustark soil an^ ing as eagerly as ho for the pro s? to pass a given point.
To Be Continued Tomo
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