Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 24, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 June 1927 — Page 14
PAGE 14
200 IN JEWISH I SOO,OOO DRIVE F ; Campaign for Funds to Be I Made City Wide. Active efforts to raise SBO,OOO for the Jewish Welfare Fund were begun today by 200 men and women canvassers. The campaign is under direction of Ralph Bamberger, general chairman. While committeemen and women are covering Indianapolis, fifty women will telephone prominent Jewish citizens to remind them of their duty toward the various institutions to benefit from the drive. Final preliminary instructions were given workers Tuesday night at Kirschbaum Community Center. Edwin J. Schanfarber, of Columbus, Ohio, spoke on "How To Do It.” Schanfarber directed the $240,000 campaign in Columbus last year. Nearly 100 Jewish institutions will benefit from the drive. Noon report luncheons will be at the Claypool beginning Thursday. Drive will end next week. HEAL LICENSES ISSUED Ninety Medical Grads to Be Examined June 21-23. License applications for chiropractors, or other drugless healers, are now being distributed by the State medical examining board. The board meets June 21-23 to examine ninety medical and osteopathy graduates. Whether the chiropractors will be examined at that time has not been announced and no return date is on the application blanks. Following examination, license to practice will be issued by county clerks. POLICE FIND ‘BREWERY’ „ “Customw*,” at Raided Place Unmolested by Officers. Beer on ice, beer brewing, beermaking material, bottles, caps, corks and alike, on hand. That was what Federal officers ana' nolice said they found when they raided the home~of Chester Frankenberger, 3821 Southeastern Ave., and charged him with operating a blind tiger. The officers say several prospective customers came to the house while they were there, but no other arrests were made. SPURNS THREE DEGREES Baptist Pastor Opposes Fundamentalist Strings to Gift. By United Press LIBERTY, Mo., June B.—Three degrees conferred by William Jewell College upon Dr. D. J. Evans, pastor of the First Baptist Church, Kansas City, have been returned, Dean R. R. Fleet lias announced. The return was a protest against acceptance of a SIO,OOO gi.it to the college by J. B. Reynolds, on the condition students using it would be taught fundamentalist tenets. indigestion and Back-ache Gone Trouble All Gone Now. Backache Quit. Eats Anything People who are suffering from stoniach or kidney trouble will enjoy reading a letter written by Chas. L. Scott, 839 E. Maryland St„ Indianapolis, Ind. Instead of being an invalid, he says his health is perfect now. Mr. Scott writes: “I suffered with stomach trouble lor twenty years. I was bloated and tt times I felt as if there was a rock lying in the pit of my stomach. My kidneys were weak and disturbed me during the night. My back ached all the time. Nothing I ate did me any good, and I tried different medicines without improving. Then a friend told me to try Vluna. The first bottle made me feel better and so I kept right on. When I started in I only weighed 145 pounds; now I weigh 157 pounds, a gain of 12 pounds, and I feel fine. Don’t have any trouble with my stomach any more and can sit down to the table and eat a good hearty meal without one bit of fear. I don’t have any trouble with my kidneys and back, either. All the pains have gone. My constipation is entirely gone, and I want to say Vluna did it all.” , Ylnna acta promptly bn sluggish bowels, lazy liver and weak kidneys. It purifies the blood, clears the skin, restores appetite and digestion, and brings new strength and, energy to the whole body. Take a bottle on trial. Then if you re not glad you tried Vluna, your money will be refunded. $1 at druggists, or mailed postpaid by Iceland Medicine Cos., Indianapolis, Ind. VI UNA The Wonder Medicine
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WHAT HAS HAPPENED DIANA BROOKS, beautiful daughter of ROGER BROOKS, owner and publisher of the 'Catawba City Times and a chain of nine other newspapers, had been kidnaped and then released. Her father is engaged in a persistent fight against the corrupt administration of Catawba City, and through tho medium of the Times, redoubles his scathing attacks on politicians of the ring and defies the underworld. Later Brooks himself disappears and In an attempt to locate him, DONALD KEENE, literary editor, and TEDDY FARRELL, Don’s ward and sob sister on the Times, meet with disaster in which Teddy saves her guardian’s life. Out of gratitude, he asks her to marry him. Although she is deeply in love with him, Teddy refuses. Don believes himself in love with LOLA MANTELL, Diana's cousin. Brooks reappears and finds that his newspaper stock is being manipulated. He suspects JOHN W. WALDEN, member of a prominent law firm. Don and Diana go for a ride in Diana’s motor launch. A squall comes up and the boat is tipped over. Don does not swim, but Diana saves him from drdwning. They wait for aid in an uninhabited shack on Catawba Island. NOW GO ON CHAPTER XXVI She found coffee and sugar, a can of evaporated milk, a loaf of rye bread and some brittle cookies, in addition to what she had already discovered. Removing the remains of the former occupants’ repast she washed the dishes and reset the table. Through the open door came the sound of whistling. Don was expressing himself in the tune of a popular “mammy” song. “All right, Mr. Humming Bird.” the girl called out blithely, “supper’s ready!” He appeared almost immediately, sniffing exaggeratedly. Both seemed to have forgotten entirely the strained incident of a few moments before. “Uhm-um, wow I But that does smell good!” The girl examined the things on the chair, remarking the rapidity with which they had dried. “They’re all ready to put on again,” she announced, as they seated themselves at the table. “We’d better change back to them right ftway after supper.” Their appetites, whetted by the afternoon’s outing and its subsequent excitement, proved enormous. Don had pinned his blanket about him, toga-fashion, leaving his arms free. They joked about each other’s comical appearance and about their situation. “It doesn't seem likely the fishermen will stay away all night, does it, Don’” asked Diana, Just a shade of worr> hi her voice as she munched a mouthful of bread and salmon. “No. No chance.” He dismissed any such possibility with an air of rough finality. “Gi’ me ’nother cup o’ that good coffee,” he added, passing over his empty cup. Then: “By Golly, Dia, but you’re a darn good cook! Where’d you ever learn, I’d like to know? That coffee is just dandy!” “You’d probably think it just positively horrid if you had it in town,” she countered lightly, but with a pleased smile lighting up her face, nevertheless. At the finish of their meal Don insisted upon h elping her wash and c’ry the dishes. “Gosh!” he ejaculated when the job was done and there was nothing more to occupy his immediate attention, “I’d like* a smoke!” I “I wouldn’t mind one myself,” his companion admitted, wiping her hands on a crash towel she had found. “Here—” She was rummaging through the cupboard—“here’s a corncob pipe and tobacco, if you’re not too finicky about smoking somebody else’s pipe!” “Probably I would be ordinarily,” he responded, taking them from her, “but necessity knows no law —not even a sanitary law!” He filled the pipe and lit it. Then drawing a chair up near the open door he seated himself, his legs outstretched. He puffed contentedly and gazed meditatively out over the lake. The ripples lapped the sandy shore with a low, murmuring sound, barely audible. Just above the horizon the sun, a great red disc, lingered for a little while and then slowly sunk in the dark waters of Lake Catawba. He sensed rather than saw the
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girl moving about behind him with light, gay steps. She was humming softly to herself in a low minor key the air of a sentimental song. Her mood was in perfect harmony with the tranquil atmosphere of the place. It seemed hardly to matter just then whether the fishermen returned or remained away. She slipped noiselessly into the annex and donned her dried clothes. “Don’t you think you’d like to dispense with your toga, Don?” she asked softly, as if fearful of desecrating the wonderful silence. “Oh, yes, yes, of course!” Her question had startled him from his reverie. He and stepped into the other room. The shack by this time was Just discernible in the darkened shadows of the late summer twilight. The gloom of the enveloping dusk filtering in through windows and door had wrapped the make-shift furnishings in a sort of glamorous softness, glorifying the dinginess of their harsh outlines. Diana glided out through the door into the open air of the beautiful evening, moving with the grace of a splendid animal. She paused near a clump of trees and looked up at the heavens, dimly lit by a few twinkling stars. How calm it all seemed. How grand and supreme. She drew a long breath. The diimer she had missed at home, all the whirl and glitter of life back there in Catawba City seemed oddly remote to her now. She was in a separate world, a beautiful world in part with God and nature. “There’s going to be a moon, Diana.” It was the girl this time was roused from the reverie. Don’s voice, like hers had been, was hushed as if he were fearful of startling her. She seated herself on the trunk of a fallen tree, a tree that had been shattered and cut down, probably, by lightning. Her fingers plucked nervously at the pulpy, decaying bark. Don stood near her but his form showed indistinctively in the vague shadows. She noticed that his gaze was turned upward. After a moment he moved closer and then seated himself at her side. His manner seemed strangely diffident and subdued. n never told you, Dia,” he began, speaking almost hesitantly, “about thq dream I had that morning after your trouble with Walden, did I?” “No, yen didn’t,” she replied, looking at him curiously. “It was just a silly fantasy of course—” She saw his face widen into his old whimsical smile—“but it was so realistic, so clearly outlined it left a strong impression on m> mind. T,dreamt that you symbolized Diana, goddess of the moon. Lola was Helen of Troy. In this fanciful night-drama you seemed to be seeking my favor. Helen of Troy—Lola—was plotting to betray me. What do you think of it? Wasn’t is a ridiculous dream?” he asked, stealing a swift
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look at her face, showing indistinctly under the stars’ light. The girl gave vent to a low amused laugh. “Well,” she said, speaking slowly as if passing judgment on a delicate issue, “to tell the truth it wasn’t Just exactly a nice thing to dream about your—ah—near fiancee. But then, you know, dreams are not supposed to have any significance, anyhow. Science laughs at their, as something outside and apart from natural phenomena. Dreams are not included in the study of psycho-analysis. People who believe in them, according to science, are absurdly superstitious.” A long silence followed her pronouncement. As they sat there, both seemingly contemplative only of the calm beauty of the still, summer light, there shot across the girl’s mind an awakening recollection. Swiftly, like a scene thrown on a silver screen, she saw herself and Don on that morning after the club dance as they stood for a moment or two in the gray of the early dawn. She saw him bend his head over her and felt again the hot. passionate pressure of his lips on hers. That kiss had lingered in her memory for many days afterward. But she had finally dismissed it as an expression of sympathy and comradely tenderness on his part. A silvery radiance was beginning to penetrate through the leafy branches over their heads. The figures of the man and girl on the log became gradually clarified, outlined distinctly in the light of the rising moon. “Oh, I nearly forgot—th’ fisherman—or men!” said Diana suddenly. a mild dismay in the harmonic tones of her voice. “Maybe he—or they—have come back!” “We can walk over and seesuggested Don. They slipped off the log to their feet. In the act he brushed almost roughly against the girl's side. “Forgive me, dear, I’m so clumsy! ” There was an unintentional tenderness in his voice and he placed his arm about her shoulder with unusual concern. Her face, showing clear now in the white light
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of the moon, looked to him all at once just as it had in that gray dawn when he had found such a strangely added beauty in it. Then again, just as on that other occasion, reason left him. He drew her close to him. But this time he rained kisses on her lips, her eyes, her throat. She offered no protest—made no struggle, but after a long minute, gently released hersell. Ecstasy was tingling every fiber of her young body—running through her veins like the intoxication of strong wine. (TO BE CONTINUED) Diana, or Lola? Which does Don really love. Read the next chapter. Railroad Signal Device Asked Petition of the Pennsylvania and the Indianapolis Union railroads for erection of an interlocking signal device 400 feet cast of Madison Ave., has been filecf with the public service commission.
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bite of a variety of mosquito known as anopheles. 10 Most winged insects have six legs.
