Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 71, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 August 1927 — Page 12

PAGE 12

LAWS GROUP CONVENES FOR I. T. ILSESSION C. P. Howard, International President, Will Open Convention Monday. Advance committee meetings for the diamond jubilee convention of the International Typographical Union opening next Monday here, were started Friday by the committee on laws at the Typographical Terrace, N. Meridian St. Amendments and other propositions relating to laws of the international union are being considered before being reported at the opening session. \ , Committee members are W. B. Trotter of Vancouver, British Columbia; W. M. Reilly of Dallas, Texas; E. E. Towne of New York City; Carl F. Sutton of Miami, Fla.; W. G. Fitzgerald of Detroit; J. "’r. Dormois of Kansas City, and J. W. Wray of Spokane, Wash. Many to Arrive Sunday Union officers are making preparations to entertain 500 delegates and 3,000 visitors who will begin arriving Saturday. Special trains from New York and Chicago will bring part of these. Monday’s program, at which Charles P. Howard, I. T. u. president, will preside, includes addresses by several prominent officials, including John L. Lewis, United Mine Workers president; W. L. Hutcheson, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners president; Daniel J. Tobin, International Union of Teamsters and Chauffers president, all of Indianapolis, and Thomas N. Taylor of Terre Haute, Indiana State Federation of Labor president. The Rev. C. G. McCrocklin, Indianapolis United Brethren pastor, will deliver the invocation. Noted Leaders Coining Other speakers during the week will include President William Green and Secretary Morrison, both of Washington, D. C„ of American Federation of Labor, and presidents of International Pressmens’ Union, Photo-Engravers’ International, international Electrotypers and Electrotypers’ Union, and international Brotherhood of Bookbinders. An automobile ride and theater party at Indiana Theater Sunday, chicken dinner at Broad Ripple Park Monday afternoon and A1 Fresco luncheon at Typographical Terrace Tuesday afternoon are among entertainment features. Reception at National Guard Armory Saturday night is planned for delegates and visitors arriving by that time. All convention sessions will be held at the Armory during the week. Officers of International union, all residents of Indianapolis, are Charles P. Howard of Chicago, president; J. W. Hayes of Minneapolis, secretary-treasurer; Seth R. Brown of Los Angeles, first vicepresident; Austin Hewson of New York City, second vice-president; Charles N. Smith 'of Brooklyn, third vice-president. Organized In 1852 The union was organized May 3, 1852, at Cincinnati, O. Indianapolis had two delegates present and was awarded Charter No.l. Headquarters were established here in Vance Block, now Indiana Trust Building, in 1889. The union at that time had a force consisting of president, vice-president, secre-tary-treasurer and one office assistant, and 20,000 members. Today the union has nearly 80,000 members, with a force of sixty employes at Typographical Terrace, besides five International officials. Rabid Cat Hnrts Two By Times Special MONROE, Ind., Aug. 2.—Mrs. Rena Johnson and Miss Alice Aurand are undergoing rabies treatment here after being scratched by a cat which was found to have been suffering from hydrophobia. Bean in Lung Fatal By Times Special ANDERSON, Ind, Aug. 2 Funeral services were held today for Lova Reddick, 3, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Reddick, who died of pneumonia after a bean became imbedded in one of her lungs. 666 It a preSfcription for Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria. It kills the germs

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BEGIN HERE TODAY VERA CAMERON, assistant to JERRY MACKLYN, advertising manager for the Peach Bloom Cosmetics Company, indignantly rejects Jerry’s plan to transform her, with the aid of Peach Bloom cosmetics, from the old-maid type she is into a beauty, and to use her photographs in the company’s advertising copy. However, when she falls suddenly in love with a man whom she hears called SCHUYLER, and who remarks to a companion he will be in Lake Minnetonka in late June, she reconsiders Jerry’s offer and resolves to undergo anything to become beautiful. Vera’s sea-green eyes remind Jerry Macklvn of an uncaptloned Sunday supplement picture he has in his desk and he has the beauty specialist refashion Vera after this picture. Vera’s aunt, Flora Cartwright, is thoroughly astonished at the change wrought in her once homely niece and is a little jealous also. Flora becomes infatuated with Jerry and tells him that Vera is going to Lake Minnetonka to see a man with whom she is in ' love. By this time Jerry is desperately in love with the girl whom he has made into a beauty. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XI SHAT evening, as_Vera Cameron was dressing for her journey and for her last engagement with Jerry Macklyn, she studied her reflection in the mirror with worried eyes, but occasionally a wicked little smile tugged at the dimple in the left corner of her mouth. “A good thing for me that Rosemary Fitch came in just when she did,” she mused. “Well, it’s up to me now. If I’m a worthy pupil of Aunt Flora and Jerry Macklyn I’ll get Jerry’s promise not to run the advertisements and I won’t have to give up my trip either. Jerry says a beautiful girl can get anything she wants—is entitled to it by the divine right of beauty. Well, dear teacher, we shall see!” The sight of the nodding, wickedly smiling face in the mirror startled her. She leaned forward, so that flesh and blood lips almost touched the mirrored ones. “Who are you?” she demanded of the girl in the mirror. “I don’t know you! You’re a stranger and you’ve murdered Vera Cameron. I’m afraid of you!” But there was terror apparent in the exquisite face and in the limpid clear green pools that were her eyes when she advanced, walking proud, ly, to meet Jerry Macklyn a halfhour later. “Dear Jerry!” she said softly, as she gave him both her hands, standing so close to him that the perfume he had beep at such pains to find for her wrapped him about like an exquisite, invisible cloak. “It’s awfully sweet of you to come to take me to the train. I’m going to miss you—terribly!” she hesitated before the last word, then dropped to gently, like a shy caress. “Then you’re going to Lake Minnetonka?” Jerry demanded savagely. “Don’t be foolish, Jerry!” she chided him softly. “Os course I’m going to Minnetonka! My reservations are already made, I’ve spent hundreds and hundreds of dollars for clothes, which I couldn’t possibly wear at a less exclusive resort—“ “Oh, shut up!” Jerry commanded her angrily. “You know why I don’t want you to go! My God, you must know or you’re blind or a fool or both! You said you couldn’t bear for me to print those advertisements with your pictures. “There are one or two things I can’t bear either, Vera Cameron, and one of them is to see you carry out this insane scheme of yours to trap a rich man into marrying you—posing as a society girl—” His voice broke and he flung up an arm. “You shan’t talk to me like that!” Vera cried passionately. “I’m not trying to trap a rich man into marrying me! I’d rather he was a poor man—a salaried man, working v for his living, doing something in which I could help him with my business training. I tell you, I don’t care for his money and his social position! I only want him because I love him—” “Don’t say that!” he struck out at her sharply, his voice rough with agony. “You’re talking like a mati-nee-idol-wol%hiping flapper! You don’t know what love is! You’ve seen him only once, you know nothing about him—” “How do you know?” Vera’s green eyes widened in angry amazement. “I’ve never told you—” “But Flora did, when she saw what was happening to me,” Jerry told her savagely. “Tried to keep me from making a blankety-blank fool of’myself by putting me wise to the fact that you were already dead gone on another man—” “she was very unselfish,” Vee-Vee interrupted with cold sarcasm. “Oh, for God’s sake, let’s not quarrel, Vee-Vee,” Jerry began with sudden humility. “I love you too much to hurt you—” “You—love me?” she echoed in

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a small voice. “Jerry—l’m sorry—” “Oh, I don’t want your pity!” He flung a furious hand across his eyes. “You can’t tell me you didn’t know I loved you! Why, for God’s sake, did you think I was devoting every minute of my spare time to you, and a lot that belonged to the firm as well? Helping you choose the right clothes, taking you out every evening to the theater and to dance —” “I thought,” Vee-Vee interrupted coldly, “that you were doing It because you wanted to help me, because you were my friend, that you had an artist’s interest In perfecting the thing you had made—” “And did you think for one minute that I was making you for another man to enjoy? I made a thing of beauty of you, Vera Cameron, because I loved you. I gave you these last three weeks because I was fool enough to believe that by constant association with me you would come to love me.” “I thought these last three weeks were a game that you were enjoying in the same way that I enjoyed it,” Vee-Vee said weakly, groping for a chair. "A game? Oh, dear God!” Jerry groaned, dropping to the floor beside her and laying his head against her knees. Vee-Vee’s slim, white fingers fluttered to his head, hovered for a momenta over that flaming mop of red curls as if she were afraid it would burn her, then dropped lightly upon It. “Don’t! I can’t stand that!” Jerry flung up his head sharply, seized her caressing hand and crushed It against his grief-twisted, hot lips. “Vee-Vee! Can’t you love me a little, darling? I’ll be so good to you, understand you so well. I can make you happy, Vera—why, you’re mine! I created you! You belong to me!” “If you had loved me—before—when I was homely and need id you —or any man—to adore me, to release me'from the inhibitions that make every homely girl miserable—” she began jerkily. “I’m not going to lie and pretend that I fell in love with you the moment you walked Into my office,” Jerry said slowly, heavily, the hand that he had kissed helej tight against his pounding heart, “but I can tell you truthfully that I did begin to love you when I snatched off your spectacles and looked into your eyes. % “I didn’t know it then, of course, but I had never so wanted to help anyone in my life. And I could have loved you as you were then as well as I do now, I performed a miracle for your own sake—” “And for advertising purposes,” Vera reminded him, tugging to release her hand. “I’m an advertising man,” Jerry admitted simply. “My work comes first, and you wouldn’t have the slightest rspect for me if it didn’t. I saw a chance to do something really, big for the firm. You’re a business woman; you ought to be able to understand my feeling toward my work.” “Oh, I do!” Vee-Vee acknowledged. “But today I asked you to do something for me that is of vital importance to me. I told you that it would cause me agonies of shame to have my picture strewn all over the country to advertise Peach Bloom Cosmetics. I asked you to suppress those ads, to substitute a professional beauty for me—a girl who would like that sort of thing—and you refused. Yet you say you love me.” “I do love you. I think you know that. And when I tried to make a bargain with you, named one condition on which I would agree to throw down the firm, you refused. I may as well tell you now that if you had accepted that condition I would have been forced, by own conscientious scruples, to resign from the Peach Bloom Company—” “Resign?” Vee-Vee echoed blankly. “Resign, certainly! Do you think I could accept money from the company after I had thrown them down for personal motives? Oh, I could get something else easily enough! "I’m one of the three best advertising men in the business! Oh, you can grin if you want to! I admit I’m no shrinking violet when it comes to rating myself in a business way. I wouldn’t be on a $25,000 salary at the age of 29 if I were. “If you had accepted my condition I should haye had every hope of winning you for my wife, and of course I don’t want my wife’s picture smiling up at every man that thumbs through a magazine. But —don’t Interrupt, please—if you are not even willing to give me a chance, if you insist on keeping our relationship on a business basis, I’m going to hold you to the letter of your bargain.” “You are certainly making yourself very plain,” Vera told him with cold fury. “And now that you know you can’t bribe me into marrying you, you are going to keep your precious job and humiliate me—” “Bribe you into becoming my wife!” Jerry shouted, spring to his feet. “My God! And yet you say I’ve made myself very plain! Haven’t you sense enough to know that Jerry Macklyn wouldn’t marry any woman in the world, no matter how much he loved her, if she didn’t love him as much he he loved her? I love you, Vera, and if you can* love me that’s an end of the whole thing. I—l guess I’d better be going.” “Good-by, Jerry. I don’t suppose I shall see you again,” Vee-Vee rose, found his hat for him and offered it unsmilingly. “I suppose that means that you expect to 1 . married,” Jerry retorted bitter!. * "Well—good luck!” “I hope I shall,” Vee-Vee said simply. “I—l really love him, Jerry, even if I have only seen him once. But if I fail, of course, I shan’t go back to Peach Bloom and to your office. I’m not so utterly selfish as you think, Jerry.” She felt that she had told him good-by forever, but she was to see him agafn that evening. She was settling her things in her section of the Pullman car, and listening, with curiously apathetic ears, to her aunt’s last minute instructions on how to play the love game, when Jerry Marklyn came charging breathlessly down the aisle; “I forgot something this afternoon," he panted, 'NedrJz broke

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

my neck and all the traffic laws getting here., Here’s a note, and you’re not to open it unless you find yourself in a jam. No, I can’t tell you what I mean, but you may find oift. “God knows I hope you won’t, but if what I’m thinking of happens, as there is one chance in a thousand that it will, you may find that the information and instructions in this letter will help you. Good-by again—and good luck!” “Oh, Jerry, I’m so glad you came!” Flora Cartwright caroled at him. "I’m all at loose ends this evening—not a thing in the world to do. Shall we go somewhere for suppper and a dance or two? Nice Jerry!” she wheedled. “Sure! Great Idea!” Jerry agreed, as if delighted. Vera watched the two of them— Jerry’s tall, broad figure with Flora’s small, dainty body as close behind it as possible—hurrying down the aisle of the Pullman car, and for the second time she knew the sharp stqb of Jealousy. (To Be Continued) Vee-Vee reaches Minnetonka. Will her dreams come true? Will she captivate the man who haa so completely captivated her?

Brain Teaser Answers

Below are answers to the Brain Questions on page 4: 1. The veldt is the name given to the open country of South Africa. 2. Asbestos is a rock. 3. Sponges are sea animals. 4. David Starr Jordan was a college president. 5. Thomas A. Edison is called the “Wizard of Menlo Park.” 6. The novel “Romola” was written by George Eliot. 7. Nicholas Longworth married a daughter of President Roosevelt. 8. ReginaldWerrenrath is a famous baritone. 9. James J. Hill was an American railroad builder. 10. Wampum was used by the Indians as money. 12. Attorneys Emsley W. Johnson and John W. Holtzman. 12. Jerry Kinney, detective captain. He has served in various capacities for forty years. He was appointed Jan. 21, 1887.

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Launching of the Southern Pacific Steamship Line’s new combined freight and passenger vessel “Dixie” at Kearney, New Jersey, is pictured here. The “Dixie,” displacing 12,000 tons, will go into service in the fall REALTORS GOING WEST Several From Here Will Attend Convention in Seattle. Several realtors will leave Friday for Seattle, to attend the annual convention of the National Association of Real Estate Boards, Aug. 10 to 13. Indianapolis persons attending are Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Carson and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Schmid, Frank E. Gates and Robert MacGregor, Indianapolis board secretary, Schmid and Gates are past presidents of the local board. Gates also Is a territorial vice president of the national association. Widow May Be Treasurer Bu United Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Aug. 2. A special meeting of Monroe County commissioners was to be held today to name a successor to County Treasurer Aaron C. McPike, 57, who died at Indianapolis after an operation. It was understood the position would be offered to Mrs. McPike.

URGE EFFICIENT RULEJOR CITY Manager League Not to Foster Election Slates. An intensive campaign for 125,000 members with enrollment of every citizen interested in nonpartisan, honest and efficient city administration as a goal, is being conducted by the Indianapolis City Manager League. Enrollment blanks have been sent workers in each ward and precinct in the city. “While the league as an organization will have no ticket of its own at any time, yet, through its board of directors and membership, it will endeavor to induce capable citizens, who have the respect and confidence of the people to become candidates for commissioners,” Claude H. Anderson, executive secretary explained. Officers of the league include Charles F. Coffin, chairman of board of directors, and executive committee, composed of Henry L. Dithmer, chairman; Charles F. Coffin, Fred Hoke, Frank E. Gates, John W. Esterline, Sol Schloss and William H. Insley. Election of city manager commissioners will be held in the fall of 1929.

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