Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 296, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 March 1927 — Page 26
PAGE 28
& picnißts 4f time REG. U. S. PAT. OFP.
(READ THE STORY, THEN COLOR THE PICTURE)
The Tinymltes enjoyed their meal, and downy said, “Well, now I feel like taking quite a cozy. nap, out there beneath the sun.” The man who’d fed them laughed aloud and then replied to all the crowd. “ ’Tls better, after eating, if you exercise and run.” So, all the bunch jumped up to [play, but Clowny found a pile of hay and said, “I’ll just flop down a while I’m much too tired to stand. I think right here's where I belong. Now, please don’t let me sleep too long.” And, as he stopped his talkhe was lost In slumberland. The rest played ’round an hour or [two, and then the first thing that [they knew, they, one by one, began ho feel their eyes grow very weak. [At first it started quite a fuss. Then Iscouty said, “Why, what ails us is [that we’ve simply grown too tired. [A nap we’d better sneak.” | They joined poor Clowny in the may just at the end of this bright
Saint and wr Sinner
Wealthy RALPH CLUNY. 68. was ■ murdered lust before he was to have ■ married frivolous CHERRY LANE, 18. ■ Immediately Cherry disappears, leaving: a ■ note for her sister FAITH saying: she ■ could not go on with the- wedding:. ■ Che-ry’s elopement with CHRIS WHEY ■ becomes known. I Cherry has been engaged several times. ■ Once she tiied to run away with AL- ■ BERT ETTELSON. a married traveling ■ salesman, and was rescued by her sister ■ and 808 HATHAWAY. Faiths fiance ■ and nephew of Cluny. § Cherry admits that Cluny attempted ■to force the marriage, but protests her I Faith suspects Chris Wiley, thinking knew that Cluny had willed much to Cherry. Charleß Reilly Neff. ■ who drew up the will, testifies that MlClun.v made Cherry his chief beneficiary or not she married him. I The coroner's jury releases Cherry but she ana her husband are arby DEVLIN, deputy district attorI Faith is furious when Bob tells her Stephen ChurchiU. whom he thinkg circumstances are Cherry and suggests a plea of I^Melf-defense as the best chance of her I Peculiar footprints and a bit of tom ■htrap suggest that the murderer might a cripple. I A mysterious letter furnishes another and Phil, a beggar, is suspected. an old newsdealer, makes an effort find him. The trial causes great ex- ■ District Attorney Tom Banning’s address to the jury, presenting the case as he expected to prove ■ by a battalion of witnesses, was a of its kind. For the most he spoke without passion, in a ■Biol, reasonable voice, a voice occasionally tinged with a hypocritical ■He began his dramatic story with finding of the body of the aged lawyer, turning aside to a tribute to Byb Hathaway, who
low Many Live?
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day, and everybody slept real sound until the break of dawn. When morning came they all arose and quickly dusted off their clothes. They stopped to thank Tom’s father, then the tinymltes were gone. They walked along the road ’til noon, ’Twas day, of course, but even, so, the moon was in the sky. Their eyesight had to be real keen, or else the moon could not be seen. It’s often faint in daytime, but you’ll see it if you try. And then they came upon a cat. He had a fiddle, and he sat a-playing funny music while the queer cow did her trick./A’nd then Wee Scouty stopped to shout, “This cow and cat we’ve read about, in Mother Goose’s Nursery Rhymes. I think them very slick.” The Tinymltes see the dish running away with the spoon in the next story. (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.)
faced him, pale, stern-faced, tightlipped, his hand closed hard over Faith’s. “I will not at this time ask you to picture to yourselves, gentlemen of the jury, the consternation, the horror, the grief, with which Mr. Hathaway looked upon the murdered body of his uncle, an old man who had been his best friend. The whole world knows the dilemma in which this sterling young man has since found himself —related by one of the closest of blood ties to the victim of murder, but even more closely related by the binds of love to tha sister of the defendant who sits before you today, charged with the murder of Mr. Hathaway’s uncle and her own fiance. “And when Mr. Hathaway takes the stand for the State, I want all of you to bear in mind that he does so in the interest of justice, while his heart, or at least that part of his heart which is filled with love for his own fiancee, Miss Faith Lane, sister of the defendant, would dictate that he do everything in his power to remove the stigma of murder from he family of the girl he intends to marry.” Bob’s face flushed a dark, angry red and for a moment Faith was suffocatingly afraid that he would rise to his feet and denounce the motives of the hypocritical district attorney. Her tight clasp on his hand held him down. The bad moment passed, as Banning swept on into a deadly logical, clackly convincing summing up of testimony which he expected to present to the jury.
“You may say, gentlemen of the jury, that all this evidence Is purely circumstantial. I say to you that such circumstantial evidence, building as it does, a complete chain, without a single weak link, is the strongest of evidence. I will show you how this defendant had one of the oldest motives known J.O courts of justice—that of greed. By the terms of his will, Ralph Cluny had made the defendant an heiress, whether she married him or not before 9 o’clock of Thanksgiving day. I have also clearly demonstrated and will prove by witnesses and documents that this defendant was acuated by another powerful motive —her love for another man. “Who would be able to say which motive actually supplied the force behind the terrific blow which crushed her and honored her above all other women? I have also demonstrated that, so far as my office—disinterestedly working in the cause of'justice—can discover, this defendant had what the law aptly terms exclusive opportunity to commit the murder with which she stands charged, and of which I believe her to be guilty. If I did not so believe, I would not prosecute this defendant.” Again Banning threw a would-be sympathetic glance toward Cherry, who stared at him unflinchingly. ■ “Now, that Is the evidence, gentlemen. It will be elaborated upon by these witnesses, and I am sure after you have heard the defense, you will be justified in carrying out what this grand jury saw fit to do to affirm their Indictment by pronouncing Cherry Lane Wiley guilty of murder In the first degree.” Tom Banning sat down, mopping his perspiring face with a huge white handkerchief, and Stephen Churchill rose to address the court. In a routine appeal for the dismissal of the indictment. As Banning 1 smilingly accepted the congratulations of his assistants, Faith knew for the first time In her life the bitterness of a hatred that lusts for the blood of an enemy. NEXT: Banning brings out the fact that Bob Hathaway was once engaged to Cherry. \ (Copyright, 1927, NEA
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