Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 43, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 June 1927 — Page 16

PAGE 16

mm and Hikers plan ■state tours |flk’!tura! Leaders Intend B Inspect Money-Mak-ing Projects. Sneeinl ■AFAYETTE. Ind., June 30.-A Hes of banker-farmer tours in bankers, farmers and county Hricultural agents and other ruleaders will study farms that Ke making money through adoption If better methods, will be held over Indiana from July 26 to Aug. 5, it rwas announced, here today. | One-day tomvs will be held in each of the. eight county agent districts, as follows: July 2 3 2, Indianapolis district; July 27, Newcastle district; July 28, Ft. Wayne district; July 29, South Bend district; Aug. 1, Lafayette district; North Vernon, Aug. 3, North Vernon district; Aug. 4. Huntingburg district, and Aug. 5, Terre Haute district. Started Last Year . A year ago district conferences of county agents and the bankers and several farm leaders were held in each of the districts mentioned. Several projects were started as a result of these joint meetings, all looking toward improvement of farming generally in the area concerned. Observe Progress The tours this year will be to observe the first results of t projects started last summer. Farms successfully producing dairy products, livestock, crops, fruit or working in any line advocated. At the meetings a year ago will be visited, the outstanding farms in each of these eight districts being selected for scops on the tours. A committee in charge of general plans for each district has been appointed by Walfred Lindstrom of Pleasant Lake, chairman of the agricultural committee of the Indiana Bankers’ Association. HOTEL MEN GATHER '\ . Innkeepers Talk Business Methods at Wawasee. How hotel anon. should entertain their guests being discussed today and Wednesday at the Wawasee Hotel and Country Club by the Indiana Hotel Men’s Association in, conference there. The Indians .polls contingent is under direction of Walter B. Smith, Indiana Hotel Men’s Association president. The party will tour in one of the Wawasee busses, leaving Indianapolis Tuesday morning and returning Wednesday night. Leonard Hicks, Lorraine Hotel, Chicago, and Walter C. Gregory Palmar House manager, Chicago, who are directing the Wawasee Hotel have arranged a program of entertainment and sports for the Indiana hotel men including a golf tournament, swimming, horseback riding, motor boating, tennis, etc.

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WHAT HAS HAPPENED DIANA BROOKS, beautiful daughter of ROGER BROOKS, owner and publisher Os the CATAWBA CITY TIMES, and a chain of nine other newspapers, had been kidnaped and then released. Hr father is engaged in a persistent fieflht against tiie corrupt administration of Catawba City and through the medium of the Times redoubles his scathing attacks on politicians and the underworld. Brooks himself is kidnaped but in five days reappears, to find that his newspaper stock is being manipulated. He suspects JOHN W. WALDEN, and determines to fight him. ____ Brooks’ closet friend Js young DONALD KEENE, his literary editor, and guardian of TEDDY FARRELL, reporter and SOB SISTER. Teddy is in love with Don, who without being sure which one he really loves, flirts with three girls. Teddy. Diana and. LOLA MANTELL, Diana's cousin. Brooks makes plans to call a meeting to expose the Waldens to the district attorney and the Superior Court Judge. NOW READ ON CHAPTER XLV. While Henry Bolton’s reception was not tinted with the degree of warmth that Judge Wharton’s cordiality had diffused, the prosecuting attorney was polite and attentive. They had met a few times, but Pop did not stand on the same ground of intimacy with him as with the judge, Bolton was a much younger man than Judge Wharton. He had only recently been elected to office and Pop did not feel on a perfectly secure footing with him. The publisher was surprised, however, in the course of the conversation, at the young man’s genuine candor and breadth of philosophy. On his entrance Bolton had seemed almost immature, too youthful for the office he held, and Roger Brooks had entertained the fleeting opinion that he was unlikely to be reelected. But after studying the district attorney he found this youthful appearance was deceptive. On close ■observation he saw that Bolton’s blue-black hair was streaked with tell-tale gray, and his almost effeminately delicate face concealed lines that were visible only when the face was not in repose. One sob sister’s flight of imagination had led her to describe him as a “lady killer” and “the exquisite district attorney,” in reporting a notorious case with which he had been associated. Bolton’s legal conference had joked him about it, but he had dismissed their jestings with a careless shrug. Pop decided that he liked the man immensely. "Then you’ll be there without fail?” he said, rising and extending his hand.

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“Yes, Mr. Brooks,” replied the prosecutor, quietly, and clasped the proffered hand in a warm grip. Only once before had the Times staff experienced the mysterious premonition that something tremendous was happening. That was during the days following Fop’s disappearance, and the added excitement that prevailed when Donald Keene and Teddy Farrell vanished for more than fifty hours. Tommy, the elevator boy, was instructed to take up no one to the sixth floor between the hours of 2 and 3 on Tuesday afternoon. To Tommy this savored of deep intrigue. The rumor spread. Curiosity grew even greater when the big boss told the girl at the switchboard on the second floor to refrain from communicating telephone calls to the editorial room during the hour named. “I’ll have one of the reporters stationed down here to take all the calls,”, stated Pop, briefly. "We can’t have any sort of interruption up there!” “Yes, Mr. Brooks!” gasped the switchboard girl. Because it was to be a calendar day Teddy was told she would not ha\ e to report for work In the moriN ing. She had been working on day assignments since the sub-cellar experience. On Monday night the little sob sister came home wearing an air plainly Indicative of something big pending. She unconsciously conveyed this air of mystery to Mrs. Speed. A high color played in her cheeks and she hummed gaily as she entered the hall. “Good news, darling?” asked the buxom landlady, with the broad smile. “Just too thrilling!” bubbled Teddy, and waltzed into the parlor, the show-room of the house with which Mrs. Speed had so unsuccessfully tried to intirgue her interest. Mrs. Speed ambled after her. “You said you had a phonograph —” began Teddy, and then taught sight of the cheaply veneered instrument It stood just underneath a grotesquely tinted enlargement of Mrs. Speed and her deceased spouse. The picture evidently had been taken in the halcyon days of the landlady’s youth. It was enclosed in an ornate gilt farme which Mrs. Speed covered once every year with fresh gilt bought from the 10-cent store. “That's you, Isn’t it?” asked Teddy with unusual interest. But every-

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thing interested her tonight. He, Don, had spoken very tenderly to her that day and had laid his arm on her shoulder for a moment. Perhaps. ...... “Do you like it?” quizzed Mrs. Speed, coyly. “I’ll say! Why, you’ve hardly changed!” declared the artful Teddy, squinting at the picture and then back at the original. “Oh, now, Miss Farrell—” “That’s right,“averred Teddy hiding a mischievous grin by stooping to peruse the contents of the phonograph case. “You go right ahead an’ enjoy yourself. There’s some nice pieces in the case,” the landlady threw back over her shoulder, as she went out. The records, Teddy found were disgustingly out-of-date. Mrs. Speed’s taste ran to church hymns and martial airs. Teddy played one, “Hark, the Herald Angels Sing,” just to be polite, while she took a chance on the last case. (TO BE CONTINUED) TAX HEARINGS TO OPEN State Board to Consider Appeals From Assessment Levies. Appeals from assessment levies made by the State tax board at the first session of the year will be heard commencing Tuesday, Chairman John J. Brown announced. Rehearing of the Citizens Gas Company case is scheduled for July 12.

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Williams and Miss Emma Lou | Chandler—will have places on the Indiana float at the national convention of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks. The two won in a popularity contest just closed here. The convention will be held at Cincinnati, Ohio, beginning July 12.

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