Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 52, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 July 1927 — Page 14

PAGE 14

SPECIAL JUDGES ARE CHOSEN TO TRYOFFICIALS Parr Named in Collins Case and Hornbrook Selected for Garrett. Special judges for the trials of John J. Collins, city purchasing agent, and Earl S. Garrett, former city market master, two of the DuvaW city Vidals entangled in the political corruption probe in addition to Duvall and City Controller Williaih C. Buser, were chosen today. W. H. Parr of Lebanon, former Boone County circuit judge, was picked for the Collins trial, and H. H. Hornbrook, Indianapolis attorney with offices at 1100 HumeMansur Bldg., for the Garrett trial. Parr, by long distance telephone, indicated to The Times that he would not accept the appointment in the Collins case. “I am not sitting as special judge,” he said. “I have refused appointment in a number of cases lately and my first inclination is to refuse this one. lam off the bench and am practicing law.” Both Collins and Garrett asked a Change of judge from Criminal Court Judge James A. Collins. The prosecution struck off the names of William V. Rooker and the defense that of Charles F. Coffin, both Indianapolis attorneys, from the three names submitted as possible special judges in the Collins case. Two Names Struck Off The prosecution struck off Paul G. Davis, 1117 Fletcher Savings and Trust Bldg.', and the defense that of Lewis B. Ewbank, former Supreme Court judge, from the names submitted in the Garrett case. Garrett is charged with -false pretense and official misconduct in affidavits filed by Prosecutor William H. Remy and his aids and Collins with soliciting a bribe. POLICE NEED COWBOYS Farmer Reports Stolen Animals Is Headed for Indianapolis. Detective Chief Claude M. Worley needed cowboys on his staff today. Charleston (111.) authorities wired that a 900-pound black and white cow, with a brand on one hip, was Stolen from a farmer there over the week-end. They believed the thieves headed for the Indianapolis stockyards in a truck.

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The Characters HELEN, an ancient lady with modern MENELAOS. her husband while she stayed at home. HERMIONE. her daughter and severest critic. , . . ORESTES, her nephew—young enough to be a reformer; old enough to have ambitions. ETEONEUS, gate-keeper by calling; philosopher by instinct: moralist by observation. ADRASTE. handmaiden and friend to Helen; scandal to most everybody else. CHARITAS. the lady next door. DAMASTOR, a boy who strayed from the family doorstep. Helen’s beautiful maid, Adraste, has been conducting a clandestine love affair with Dumastor, the boy next door. The neighborhood seems to have followed the progress of the courtship pretty closely with the sole exception of Charitas, Damastor’s mother. Os cours, Charltas desires something better than a maid —and. certainly something much better thaD a maid of Helen’s —as the wife for her darling boy. After all. Damastor has had bringing up. However, be that as it may. read what the youngsters themselves think of the situation. CHAPTER IV “All day I’ve thought of you, Adraste,” said Damastor. “You run in my head like a tune; whatever less lovely goes on round about me, I can always be silent and listen.” “I like to hear you say so, Damastor. How wonderful you are, with a pretty speech every time we meet, and never twice the same! To me you are a picture, not music; I dream of you—dreams so lively, I almost fear the household will see what I see, and know my secret.” “What do you see, Adraste?” “Do you ask, my lover? Damastor, your lips are cold! Poor boy!” “Come farther into the shadow, Adraste—they will see us if we walk in the moonlight. I never saw such a great moon. Here, we can sit on this garden bench, and talk in peace.” “There never was such a moon, Damastor, but if I could I’d have it brighter still, and everybody here to see us walking in it. Our happiness is too beautiful to hide. I’m so proud of you, Damastor Damastor, do you love me—as you said?” “I love you more, Adraste, oh so much more! Don’t you feel it, how much I love you? Do we need words?” "I like you tell me, Damastor; nobody could tell it as you can. When you first told me you loved me—l shall never forget how you told me!” “Adraste, I don’t recall a single word. What I remember is the silence afterward. I was so afraid there might be someone else you cared for already, and you managed to let me know there was someone and just as I felt ready to die, I found out I was the one, after all.” “Yes, goosey, you found out! I had to tell you.” “Adraste, do you remember the first time we met—that is, to meet? When my mother asked me to go for the jar of water, and asked you to help me, and you came along so demurely?” “Your mother wouldn’t ask me now to help you, would she? Do you remember that next time, when Helen brought me to your mother’s house, and your mother sent me to the dther end of the garden, and so arranged it herself, without meaning to, that you came out and talked to me?” “Do I remember? My mother will never be the same person again, we gave her a shock. Adraste, she still thinks I hadn’t met you before; she insists she never asked you to help with that water-jax.” ‘Damastor, have you thought out any plan for us yet—what we’re to do?” “I think of it all the time, Adraste, and the best thing still seems to wait a little longer, and keep our happiness, our happy secret, to ourselves. We couldn’t be happier than we have been, and are—could we?” “Damastor, my dear lover, it’s a happy secret, as you say—but I can’t keep it much longer.” “You mean—you mean—” “Os course I mean! There, don’t be so frightened. I told you before, and now it’s dawning on you, as our

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love did—it Is our love again, isn’t it? In a little while every one will know. “Why shouldn’t they? I’m happy and proud, Damastor! it’s altogether beautiful. But I wish it weren’t a secret? Why shouldn’t we go right out and say to any who will listen, Damastor and Adraste are given to each other, given by their love, forever? I don’t see what they could do, except envy us. “Your mother wouldn’t like me at first—she loves you too much to care for any girl who takes you away—but in time I could make her like me. Your father would be kind to us.” “Father would be kind, if he were alone,” said Damastor, “but mother would be harder to convert than you think. She didn’t like your beauty, to start with; she thinks that all beautiful women are probably bad, and if she knew what—what you just told me—she’d be sure her theory was sound. She wouldn’t understand. I keep hopig that if we wait there may be some way out.” “Tell me this, Damastor—do you think I’m a bad woman? Are you sympathizing at all with what you said would be your mother’s view?” “Oh, Adraste, how can you ask me that?” “How can I, dear? Because you suggest the question. You don’t speak as you did when you wanted me first, when you said we’d face life together, when you were sure the only thing that mattered was that we should belong to each other. “You weren’t so prudent then—at least, you weren’t so prudent for me, were you? I’m not saying that I didn’t want to love you—l mean that you were your very noblest then, when you took me, took your whole life in your own hands, I thought, faced any risk at all, of poverty, even of your mother’s anger, in order that you might be yourself. Would you do it again, Damastor, if it were all still to be done?” “Adraste, I love you so, what you say makes me feel a bit hurt, as though you were accusing me of unfaithfulness. I can’t see how I’ve done anything to disappoint you.” “In a way, you have, Damastor, or I think you have; all I want is for you to prove me mistaken. I thought you knew your mind when you asked me to give myself—l thought you were giving yourself, too. “With such a man I could face anything. I knew your mother didn’t like me, but we agreed we had the right to make our own choice and live our own lives. I imagined that you would go to her and simply say, with complete affection and respect, that you and I loved each other; that it was all settled. “Damastor, I’m disappointed that you do nothing at all—just wait. It isn’t so brave nor so wise as I expected you to be, and at times I fear you are less sure of yourself than you were. Did I misjudge you, I ask ? Or did you love me once, and have you changed?” “How much I love you, Adraste, I’ll give my life to showing. If I’ve decayed, it isn’t because I’m a coward. It will take courage to face my mother, but when I’m sure it’s the right time I’ll speak to her. Have you told Helen?” “Not a word.” “Does she suspect?” “Damastor, Helen seems to know everything of this sort that goes on around her, so I dare say she has guessed long ago, but she has said

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

nothing to me, and of course I haven’t spoken to her.” “If you feel that way toward Helen, you ought to understand why I wish to keep it a secret for a while longer.” “I don’t want to keep it a secret from anybody, Damastor, but I want you to tell it. I want you to boast of it, and be proud, so that I can be proud of. you.” “Aren’t you proud of me, Adraste?” “Damastor, I dare say no man ever quite knows why a woman loves him; so far as I can judge from what you say, you entirely miss the things I love you for. I love the courage in you to know at sight what belongs to your nature, to your own destiny. “Most people seem to be imitating each other, without considering whether anything they do Is what they really want. You have what Helen aften speaks of, you have the love of life; you naturally try to see things as they are, you hate subterfuge'and hypocrisy, you would be frank with yourself and with others. “That’s why I loved you, Damastor. If you should change, I couldn’t be proud of you-v-I should be fond of you always, but, oh, so sorry for you!” “I don’t blame you for misjudging me, Adraste, but you do misjudge me. I have told you again and again that I would let no one, not even my parents, control my destiny. “If I could go to them now, as you want me to, and tell them I've chosen you for my future wife, whether they like it or not, and If they would calmly submit, as you half hope they would, then I suppose you’d be convinced that I’m a forceful character. “But if I tell my father this news, with mother so fixed in her prejudice, he’ll turn me out of the house —and where are we to go? I don’t see the heroism of that. Love of life —yes, but first of all we must live. “Temporarily, at least, we are both better off than we’d be if my people sent me away and I had no shelter or protection ‘to offer you.” “Must one live, Damastor—is that the thing of first importance? How we live, I’d rather say. I think the love of life must have In It a kind of recklessness, a determination not to pay too high for mere existence—not to pay with your soul. “My way would be to go hand In hand with you now, and tell them all about it; and if they disowned us, as you expect, then we’d literally walk down the road together till something happened to us—some good fortune or perhaps some bad. That would be the sincere and fine thing to do, I’m sure.” “What a wild idea, Adraste!—to go off that way, like tramps, with you—you couldn’t stand it; you’d die before we had gone far!” “I shall die here. But I’d rather die that way, with the man I thought I gave myself to. Damastor, I know tonight that I have lost you.” , “I'll never leave you, Adraste! Tonight you are full of gloomy thoughts and fears. Adraste, I love you absolutely. I’ll make you proud of me yet, when the right moment comes to speak, and you see at last that I was right. . . . Don’t go —we have lost the hour talking of these stupid matters. I thought we were to be together, just to be happy, and here we’ve been arguing.” “Will you walk to the house with me, Damastor, or would you prefer that I go back alone? Very probably Helen will see us ,or Menelaos, or Hermione.” * (To Be Continued) More Forestation More than 1,600,000 saplings will be planted on government lands in the province of Quebec alone this year. Annual plantings are increased until, by 1929, they will like‘ly run to 5,000,000 saplings a year.

Spends Last Penny to Win Mate; Would You?

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“I’ll spend my last dime to become beautiful and win the husband I want,” said Vee Vee Cameron, the “plain frump” business girl. And she did. And she won him. What would you do in a situation of that sort, girls of Indianapolis? Would you fling aside all thoughts of your career, spend the last penny of your bank account, give up your job, and plunge in full tilt in the love race? Vee Vee did it, in “The Penny Princess,” fascinating serial which starts soon in The Times. Marriage or a big business berth —which would you have taken? Write a letter of not more than 175 words to “The Penny Princess Editor of The Times,” giving your views. The best letter will win for the writer a trip to Grand Beach, Mich., transportation paid, and a week’s stay at the Golfmoor Hotel, one of the finest on the Great Lakes, room and meals at The Times expense. Then, too. there’ll be other prizes, to be announced this week. And don’t forget the big free dance at Cinderella, the “dance

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Below are answers to the “Now You Ask One” questions on page 9. 1. Wind Cave Park, in the Black Hills, is near the Summer White House. . 2. Hot Springs Park, in Arkansas, established in 1832, is the oldest national park. 3. Mt. McKinley Park, in Alaska, has the highest mountain in North America. 4. Mesa Verde Park, in southwestern Colorado, is famous for Its cliff dwellings. 5. Lassen Volcano Park, in northern California, has the only active volcano in the United States. 6 N. B. is the abbreviation of the Latin “nota bene,” meaning note well. 7. The Neanderthal man Is the name given to a prehistoric race. Bones of one of these primitive men were found near Neanderthal, Ri the RhinS valley, Germany. 8. An isosceles triangle has two equal sides and two equal angles. 9. A young pigeon is called a squab. 10. Water Is composed of approximately 11 per cent hydrogen and 89 per cent oxygen, by weight. 11. The charter board passes on all charters for State banks and trust companies. 12. Members of the charter board are the Governor, secretary of State and State bank commissioner EDITOR IN AIR AGAIN Bu United Prr*t RANGOON, Burma, July 11.— Van Lear Black, publisher of the

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