Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 97, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 September 1922 — Page 6
6
ty 1 Sdwtn
Waa the body of that ray young lieutenant Barnet lottr ttlle, in nr cold and stiff In the snow and Ice? This was the fear In the heart of ETHEL CAREW, when she rushed from the home of her grim old grandfather, LUCAS CULLEN. SENIOR, who had beer struck with anger and terror when he learned that Loutrelle was going to Resurrection Rock, that ghostly island In Lake Huron, with Its unoccupied house. Loutrelle and Ethel had met in these northern woods of Michigan. In London he had received, in a seance, messages from Ethel's father, instructing him to to to the Rock —a trip which he hoped would clear up his obscure parentage. Old Lucas Cullen, winner of millions in violent battles for timber land In the early days, tries to prevent Loutrelle from reaching the Rock and Ethel fears that Barney has been killed by KINCHELOE, acting under Cullen’s orders. She tries to reach the Rock herself. CHAPTER VI. Ethel reached the lake and removed her skis. Kincheloe was still tar ahead of her, but he was exhibiting' an uneasiness which restored to Ethel her fears of the night. Miss Platt’s husband seemed to be losing determination; he no longer was hurrying but was glancing back often at her, and he was wandering off from the direct line to Resurrection Rock. She noticed that something on the shore seemed to disturb him and, looking about. Ethel observed that Asa Redblrd had emerged from -the trees and was hastening after them. Asa was carrying his rifle. ‘‘Tou want me to stop him?** Asa Inquired when he came up, Ethel shook her head. “Just come with me." In silence they completed their Journey to the mysterious house on Resurrection Rock. There were no signs of life and when Ethel and Asa Redblrd reached the main entrance, the girl received the first shock. The glass panel over the knob had been broken. After a moment’s hesitation, Ethel thrust her arm through the hole so plainly prepared for turning the key from the outside. As 6he did so she realized that neither Bagley nor Barney Loutrelle would have need to enter in this fashion. “Bagley got key from Wheedon," Asa explained. “Barney Loutrelle came yesterday and Bagley right here and let him in." The room ehowed no sign of disorder or of violence done there: yet! sight of the room itself amazinsfly disturbed her. She did not know why, at first; she merely felt frightened as by something uncanny. , “Asa, I've been in this room. I*ve never been in this house before; but I’ve been In this room”’ Ethel exclaimed. “Yes?” Asa inquired, unable to 1 comprehend her. It was plain to her that this room once had been part of a French building. French of the sixteenth or seventeenth century. Ethel's recognition of this partly explained her im pression of familiarity here when she was a child at her aunt's chateau. Aunt Cecilia had taken her on visits to chateaux of many of Uncle Hilaire's friends. She might Indeed have been In this very room before. It was hopeless for her to try to recall from her memories of when she. ijjras 5 l and 8. Her mind was not now dwelling upon what might have been her own association with this room. What was Barney Loutrelie’s? He bad been sent across the ocean to the room. Why?
DREAR 816 w*r ES Cc UllLnilr Made Hourly in Our Own Bakery S ort : lc -...42c POST TOASTIES, O _ SOUPS, Campbell'* 10X CALUMET BAR. Or OLO KEIAABLE 7QKellogg's. Dkg OC assorted, can -toC FOffDEB, can &PC COFFEE, lb >* QUAKER QCAKUES, W SARDINES, oil, aW . HEINZ VINEGAR. ID. A JV*!™ .V E ,'k 27 C pkg. . * be new stock, can... 4 /2C bottle >, lOC toIFEE, lh ...fciC KELLOGG’S IQ JAR RUBBERS, 7- HEINZ CATSUP, lQ TEA good (jnal- OC. BRAN, pkg........ IJC heaTT, dor C bcttle IwC Ity, lb ...JJC PEN'-JEL, 1 J SALMON’, flat 71/„ HEINZ PORK and |A COCOA, pure bulk, aft pkg 14c can I/2C BLASS, flat can.... IUC lb - IUC Wilson’s Milk, Q, ~ COFFEE, Jackson’s t% E 3 Tail Can O I A%/ SPECIAL BLEND .... Lb.l# SHREDDED WHEfifTPkg., 10c DIADEM FLOUR, Q jf| P. &G. SOAP, Bar. . . 4y 2 c 24-Lb. Sack %9 Wh OLEO GOOD C 1 JELLT, LIBBY’S, 1A„ KIDNEY BEANS, glA* FLOUR. Diadem. OO FUCK. lb 4DC ! 8 oz. jar IUC ; Van Camp's. can.jQ /3C o lb, sack MLS. PEANUT BUT- lOIA ' STRAWBERRY ir_ SUGAR CORN, OC _ VIRGINIA |A TER. best 1b...1Z/2C PRES. 16 oz IDC ! Scans 4DC SHEET, pkg AVC FIG BARS, fresh 10l / „ MUSTARD, large If, | PORK AND BEANS, C- NATIONAL (A baked, lb 14/2C 22-oz. jar IDC Del Monte, ran... . .DC OATS, pkg 3C GINGER SNAPS, Ift CATSUP, large If, PEAS, Early June, Os SWANS DOWN OC crisp, lb IUC 16-oz. bottle IDC 3 cans “DC FLOUR, Instant... ,4iJC HOME-MADE Tr~ CHILI SAUCFb Ift, GOLD DUST. ~ Of*. I-AVA SOAP. P CAKES, lh IDC 8-oz. bottle IUC 1 large pkg 4PC bar UL and jk El Pure Cane .. Ip OUtaflll GRANULATED LP. £ 2 “ OLD DUTCH Q I CREME OIL SOAP. 7 PAROWAX, Ql / - PICKLING )A CLEANSER, can OC bar 1C 1-lb. pkg O/3C SPICE, lh 4UC SUN BRIGHT r ; CRYSTAL WHITE I! SALT, free running, t POTATOES, fancy, jq CLEANSER, 14-oz ...DC SOAP, bar .. .M6C 2-lb. box vv ’ 15 lbs., peck.. 4oC RIN'SO cl/ ; KIRK'S FLAKE 11, TOOTHPICKS. Ift, EAGLE MILK, jft p k K 0/2C j IVHITE SOAP, bar..M6C polished, 3 boxes.,lWC Borden’s, can IDC SANT-FLUSH. OA OT, PICKLES, large, If, CORNED BEEF nfy regular size can 4UC large pkg tJC sweet, doz IJC |_ hash, large can...44C LUX OB FAB. IftT LUMP STARCH, PICKLES, large, lft j SCRATCH (TTr pkg IUC best, lb DC sour, doz IUC j FEED, 100 lbs.yl Op Standard Grocery Cos. WATCH FOR OUR NEW STORES IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD |Og| joLir Remember, the “Standard” Prices Are Always the Lowest—Why Pay More? KfljlSjSjlSSP; U/unfarla Storerooms In all parts of city and STORES IN ndlllvUi suburbs. Notify our office, 419 East STORES IN INDIANAPOLIS Washington Street. Telephone MA In 0665. INDIANAPOLIS WEES QUALITY—The First Consideration at the “STANDARD”—THEN PRICE jffUS
She moved nearer the mantel and gazed at the design incised over the fireplace; It bore a dignified, formal device like—yes, very like —the device wrought upon Barney Loutrelle’s ring. They searched the house thoroughly. No one, living or dead, was in the house; nowhere had they come upon sign of violence or Indication of cause for Barney Loutrelle’s disappearance. “Where’s he gone, Asa?” Ethel appealed finally. “How do I know?" the Indian returned Irritably, and Ethel appreciated that his nerves were on edge. She heard scratching at the door and, remembering the dogs, she recalled the brown mat In Lad’s hair. “Let them in, Asa," she directed. When the door was opened and the dogs ran in, ahe thought that they rushed into the salon because she was there; but Lad only brushed against her on his way to the further end of the great room where he thrust his head down and smelled of the floor, whimpering and scrambling about in a circle* Lass blundered about near him so excitedly that Ethel followed to see what was there, only to find a space of bars, varnished floor. But her interest stirred LAd to leap upon her and dash to the door on the south which communicated with the outside steps down the Rock to the summer land.ng. When she looked through the glass of this door, Ethel observed for the first time that those steps showed the depressions of deep footsteps. The dogs Jumped into the snow and floundered down the steps to the ice where they shook themselves and
PAY US A VISIT During State Fair Week Every ecmrtesv will be shown you. Guides will be furnished tu show you around and point out and explain the many things of interest. Come and see where the well-known “Reliable” hams, bacon, lard, etc., are made and the care with which they are prepared. There will be a special exhibit, arranged for your benefit. Your visit will prove interesting, entertaining and educational and you will be glad you came. Take "West 'Washington car. Get off at Blackford street and walk one and one-half squares south. King an &Cos. Pork and Beef Packers INDIANAPOLIS.
rolled over, barking. She was fearfully expecting that Lad was leading her to the sort of horror which she had believed to be in the house when she came upon chunks of ice standing beside a hole, about a yard In diameter, which had been chopped through to the water. Young ice had frozen over, not yet half an Inch thick. She knelt and leaned forward with her hands on the edge of the hole, peering down through the new, glassy crystal into the dark, deep water underneath. She felt footsteps on the floor of ice and, looking about, she saw that Asa after some'delay had descended from the Rock. He came to hes side and gazed into the hole. •Water hole,” he said quietly. "Bagley chop it here yesterday to till buckets. Bagley did not chop it so big.” “Yes; that’s it; why? Why, Asa?” she cried, suddenly losing control of herself. “Why should any one want that hole bigger?" “Nobody would,” Redblrd assured positively, "for water.” •’No,” she said. ’No; no; no!” She meant, first, agreement with Asa; then revolt at, and denial of, the images in her own mind. The Indian and she now understood the same events alike; Asa, indeed, had discovered more than she. “What kept you up there?” she asked him. He said he would show her; and together they ascended the steps in the Rock. He led her to the part of the floor where the dogs had been sniffing. "Somebody washed right here, you see. Somebody did it last night, I think; somebody scrubbed. But no place else." "Somebody burned cloth in fireplace," Asa Informed, going to the hearth and producing n handful of ashes which exhibited the woven texture of cloth; he produced also a charred bit of shaped wood which had been the back of a scrubbing brush. Asa offered it to her and the put out her hand to take it, and then she could not touch it. Blood had stained It before It had been burnt; Kincheloe had put It In the fire to burn away—blood. Asa had let go of it, thinking that she was taking it, and it dropped Jp
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
the floor between them. It was to make sure that such trifles as this were completely burnt, she thought, that Kincheloe wished to come to the Rock early this morning. She could think these things; but she could not say them. She told him about the mat of blood in Lad’s hair. Asa went out and examined the dog. "Nothing there now," he reported when he returned. “Hair there all cut off." This brought her to the door to witness for herself that, since her discovery early that morning, some one had clipped the hair close under the dog’s Jaw. Who had done thatT Kincheloe? Or Miss Platt? Or—her grandfather? “Somebody was killed here, Asa?" “What else to think?” “But who—Asa, who?” “Who was here last night?” Asa returned logically. She flinched. He meant, of course, her friend of yesterday, Barney Loutrelle. CHAPTER TO “Well,” Lucas hailed Ethel on her return. "Well; you’re back from your little sunrise expedition, Klnchelo* tells me. Tell me all about It.” "Grandfather!" she orled, breathless from her excitement and from hurrying. “He was just here. Kincheloe mustn’t go away; he—■” "What’s the trouble with you?” her Special for Saturday Jelly Glasses, 37* Dozen Fruit Jars, Pints, Quarts and Half Gallons. Jar Lids and Rubbers. Fieischmann’s 6 H iß ß w. w wa ß sh.
GROCERY STORES dale, money-saving STORES THROUGHOUT Tit CITY AND STATE stores. E POTATO ESlr r WILSON MILK, 81/3-1 NEW BEANS, 8;,. LOW PRICE PRESERVING NEEDS Quart Mason Eclipse Glass-Top—Easy Seal Jars, 90c Dozen Pint Mason Jars 73c Doz. Jar Caps . -x-t-i-j-uj.-e.-i- 27c Doz. Tin Quart Cans Doz Parowax -9c Lb. Jelly Glasses .45c Doz. Jar Rubbers ,8c Doz. One Price —One Blend —One Quality iCOFFEEf|33£ e c,der" VINEGAR, 22bot. |bisT FLOSrT 98' DDEAD 5c 'a BIItAU 10c PARKER HOUSE ROLLS Do “" 15 C Baked GINGER SNAPS Lb ' 10 C Tasty Raisin Bread—Full of Luscious Raisins, 10c Loaf S LEMON SNAPS, 158,. | ,Sri* BREAD, 6L, BAKED IN OUR OWN MODERN BAKERY DELIVERED FRESH TWICE DAILY TO ALL OUR STORES BAKED FIG BARS, 1 2 1 / 2 Lb. Pair? MACARON: and SPAGHETTI iTEAI3! 251491 For Delicious Ice Tea We Recommend Our Straight Ceylon Tea—l Lb. Makes 35 Quarts All Our Stores Wifi Close 10 A. M. Monday, September 4 [Labor Day] OPEN UNTIL 10 P. M., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 TWO DOWNTOWN STORES 432 East Washington Street. 110 North Delaware Street. THEBE PRICES FOR INDIANAPOLIS STORES ONLY. It’s a Lucky Neighborhood That Has a Childs Grocery Store.
grandfather demanded, seizing her arm. “Step in here and explain what’s come over you.” He used just enough force to overcome her physical opposition. She did not struggle violently, as his grasp warned her that If she exerted more strength, he would also employ more and overpower her. He was angry with her for what she had done in the night and for having gone out early this morning; but he was big and firm-handed and so much as usual, that she cried out confidently: "Grandfather, you don't know what he’s done!”
Orang'e Label Te a
‘Sidgaays CHOICE
liidgcaays Tea
DISTRIBUTOR, SCHNULL AND COMPANY
"Who done?" “Kincheloe!” "Well; weU,” he demanded. “What’s he done that I don’t know? TeU me all about It,” he Invited. “You know about it; all; all!” she cried aloud. “Oh, grandfather!” And she shrank back before him under her share of the horror and guilt of what had been done. (To Be Continued) ARTISTS IN CONTEST v Well-known artists of the State have entered posters in the State-
wide poster contest of the Riley Memorial Association, entries for which will close at 6 o’clock today. Twenty-flve posters have already been received.
f If JLtGllitWFjLft (OFFEEalways urnform. ( Flavor and aroma are retained to the last in the airtight tin can. The Fishback Cos. INDIANAPOLIS KANSAS CITY
Wanser’s Modern Market 215 North Illinois Street QUALITY RIGHT PRICES RIGHT Granulated Cane Bugar, 7l _ | Beef Roasts (Native 1 Q 10-lb. limit, per lb I /2C Cattle), per lb HUM IOC Post Toasties. Q ! Bugar-Cured Picnics, 4 Q Per package oC per lb ........lOC Shredded Wheat, 1 n Bacon Squares. t o per package ...14iC Per pound ........lOC
y2llaa£& X# 350-354 East Washington Stmt The Biggest Retail Grocery in Indiana Potatoes—New York Giants, Peck 25^ Hoosier Geld Creamery Butter. Pound print- .36£ Domino Sugar, 5-pound carton • • • • 39< 25-Pound cloth sack $1.95 Diadem, 24 pounds 89£ M I/VUII* Pills bury or Gold Medal, 24-pound sack. sl.lO 1 lull! E-Z Bake • $1.05 Del Monte California Blackberries, No. 2 y 2 can 26£ Breakfast Bacon, sugar cured and Pork Chops, small and lean. nicely streaked. Pound 28* Pound 30* Two pound# 55* Liberty Sandwich Meat A subArmour's Freah Smoked Sausage. Boiled Ham. Tastes Pound 21* “" d Eat * L ' ke Ha ™’ Pound Frankfurter Sausages, no cereals and good Poun d . .26* Pound Peanut Butter, fresh made, 2 Smoked Liver Sausage. Pounds 27* Pound 21* Brick Cheese, rich and creamy. Armour’s Star Ham, whole. Pound 28* Pound 27*i Llmburger Cheese. Pound Dried Beef, sweet cure. Half block 25* Pound 25* Pimento Cheese. Pound 36* Boiled Ham, lean and sweet. New York Cheddar, aharp and Half pound 28* snappy. Pound 39* Heinx White Pickling Vinegar, superior for pickling and preserving. Gallon ... 50£ Pure Apple Cider Vinegar. Gallon 50£ __________ Coarse Pickling Salt; 5 lbs.. 10* I Certo, for making Jelly. Ideal Fruit Jars; half pints..9s*! Bottle .....35* Mason Fruit Jars; half ga1.51.30; Pen Jel 14* Tin Cane. Dozen 45* Good Luck Fruit Jar Rings, extra Mixed Pickling Spices; lb. .25* ! heavy red— Zubian Sealing Wax, 3 sticks.ll* [ Dozen 9* Parowax B'/ a * 3 dozen for 25* Tin Sealing Lid. D.n ...IS* Mason Jar Caps. Dozen 28* stone Jug, 2-gallon size 50* Jelly Glasses, 1-3 pints. Corks for Catsup Bottles, Dozen .39* Dozen .5* Economy Fruit Jar Lids. Dosen .......28^ Comb Honey, new crop, large full frame 25£ BREAKFAST CEREALS Pep ............... 17* Wheatena .......... ■ ... 24* Armour’s or Quaker 05t5....10* Virginia Sweet 10*. f, p i”c “ 2 y.„nd.::::">*<• “■* =>< Uncle Sam’s Health Food ...19* Hudnut’a Hominy Grits 10* Pettijohn's Breakfast Food ..23* Sanitarium Cooked Bran ....22* Ralston Breakfast Cereal ....24* , Hudnut’s Quick Mush 14* Scratch Feed, no grit, 100-pound sack ...• ........$1.85 25 Pounds 50£
The Scientific Way Is the Polk Way The scientific way of handling milk is expensive, requiring constant v supervision and the expenditure of thousands of dollars for the latest equipment. The Scientific Way Is the Polk Way Visit the Sunlight Plant and learn something of, the organization that serves more than 23,000 Indianapolis families. Phones RAndolph 0852-3-4-5 POLKS MILK "Food Jbr 7~hoTi<?h&*
SEPT. 1, 1922
The winning poster# are to be used In the campaign for funds for the Riley Memorial Hospital to be conducted Oct. 1 to 7. Prizes in the amount of $l6O have been offered by Howard Chandler Christy.
