Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 73, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 August 1927 — Page 14

PAGE 14

BAN HANDSHAKE FOR JM HERO And Lindy Will Make Only 25 Autographs in City. That quaint old American custom, the hearty handshake, will be practically taboo when Col. Charles A. Lindberg visits Indianapolis, Tuesday. Milburn Kusterer, advance representative of the tour, who was in the city Wednesday to arrange for the reception, let this be known along with a few other rules for the care of the trans-Atlantic flier. Less than half a dozen persons, Including Mayor John L. Duvall, Will be allowed to grasp the Colonel’s hand when he lands at Mars Hill Airport at 2 p. m. The practice will be kept to a minimum at the afternoon meeting at the State fair ground and the banquet at Columbia Club at 6 p. m. ‘The Colonel will make only twen-ty-five autographs,” Kusterer announced. The general executive committee of which the mayor is chairman and Wallace O. Lee is vice chairman, will select the favored articles. Lindbergh will auto- , graph them in seclusion, Kusterer said.

Brain Teaser Answers

Below are' answers to the Brain fTeaser questions on page 4: 1. Cossacks are horsemen from the steppes of Russia. * 2. The letter occurring most frequently in the English language is “e.” 3. Mt. Vesuvius is a volcano of Italy. 4. Robert Burns was a Scotch poet. 5. The tibia is a bone in the lower leg. 6. The pointed arch is a distinguishing feature of Gothic architecture. 7. Miles Standish asked John Alden to do his wooing for him. 8. The Congo River empties into the Atlantic Ocean. 9. Little Eva was a character in “Uncle Tom’s Cabin.” 10. The “Just So Stories” were written by Rudyard Kipling. 11. Robert T. Humes. v 12. Enforcing motor vehicle laws on State highways and curbing motor theft. Tours End Today By Times Special HUNTINGTON, Ind., Aug. 4. The banker-farmer tours of Indiana closed today with a trip through the district around this city. The start today was made at Dale.

Stop Stomach Misery TAKE ioddSWiNE K>nic I .I—ww. iqga— y rarwTTia Made Prom Finest California Wine, Together With Useful * Medical Ingredients A Pleasant, Appetizing Summer Tonic, Used With Unusual Success as a Tonic and Stomachic has brought relief to thousands. For sale at Haag Drug Stores and all t other drug stores throughout this section.—Advertisement.

The help-yourself plan of a cafeteria enables the finest of foods at **odd penny prices” to be served at White’s Cafeteria u On the Circle.”

Aboslute Safety Convenient Location Double Lock Boxes From $3 to ?30 a Year Hours 8:30 to 5 CONTINENTAL SAFE DEPOSIT CO. 17 N. Meridian Street

MONEY LOANED NDIAMONDS Liberal j— Reliable Confidential SUSSMAN’S STATE LOAN OFFICE Ltfftl Rates—Bonded Brokers Established 24 Years 239-241 W. WASH. ST.

The Latest Victor and Brunswick Records Obtainable Here "Everything in Music” 27 EAST OHIO ST. Hume-Manaur Building Phone MA In 4292

Feathered Facts and Fancies

If \ ■ \ IjT M I \\ b —\ Wft H e is so S/vall and so \\ ML/ U U WELL CAMOUFLAGED QH HIS II , \\\ ’ 1 COLORING THAT HE MIGHT NOT z I \ v be seen were it his „ /, L* X call OF*\See -S*ee -,See -\fee. % CT?he black AND WHITE WARBLER-, f H like all other WARBLERS, i ■ WORMS INSECTS * WHICH HIS if 3f, and nuthatches’ or. chick|S ' '' AOEES CAM PICK UP A MEAL - ■ 0 m ' AFTER HIM * ItiUUAtte Ml- - „ 1,111 - bERGOSOtO C 1927 by ncs scnvicc. inch

In (dime dustin

BEGIN HERE TODAY VERA CAMERON suddenly realizes the need to be beautiful when she sees and falls in love with a man she hears called Schuyler. Vera is secretary to JERRY MACKLYN. young advertising manager for the Peach Bloom Cosmetics Cos. He propuses to change her into a beauty with the aid of the company cosmetics and to use her photographs in advertising copy. At first Vera refuses, but her need to attract Schuyler causes her to consider. She determines to go to Minnetonka, where she knows he is going, and meet this man with whom she has so hopelessly fallen in love. Jerry has the beauty specialist use a model in refashioning Vera an uncaptioned Sunday spplemtnt picture which he finds in his desk The picture Shows an astonishingly lovely woman with a di.'tinctive bob and green eyes—eyes liks Vera’s. After the change. Vera is ■ so lovely her aunt FLORA CARTWRIGHT. does not recognize her at first. Vera begs Jerry not to use her pictures in the advertising and he says he will do as she wishes if she will give up the trip. She refuses. He begs her again to give up the adventure. confessing-T.hat he loves her. She does not see him again until the train is about ready to leave. He gives her an envelope which she Is not to open unless she ‘‘gets in a lam. When Vera gets to Minnetonka station, she transfers to a bus. There is a couple In the bus who stare at her as if they recognize her and whisper significantly. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XIII ECAUSE of the unreasoning fear which had gripped her i__l since she had. discovered her fellow-passengers ip the hotel bus whispering about her and acting as if they were sure they recognized her. Vee-Vee Cameron betrayed none of the delighted surprise with which she caught her first glimpse of Lake Minnetonka and the Minnetonka Hotel. Her chin was uplifted haughtily and her green eyes were serene, even bored, as the bus swung into the circular drive which led up to the magnificent entrance. The hotel crouched almost on the edge of the big lake. A glassenclosed pavilion led from one wing of the, building to the bathing pier, so that the guests might dress for swimming in the privacy of their own rooms. The hotel itself was like an English castle of Tudor architecture, fashioned of great, rough gray stones, its innumerable turrets and towers decorated with narrow beams of dark stained wood. Ivy almost covered the walls.

BE A TING f Shop here where prices are always lowmt . . . where styles are always newest ... where the BHmBmSbB selection is tremendous. An actual saving on Corner Meridian_and Washington Sts. * mk

Girls and men in canoes and rowboats called to one another across the echoing water; on the tennis court two men and two girls were playing a swift game, their laughter floating invitingly toward the new arrivals. “My home for two weeks!” Vera told herself, tingling with the thrill of adventure. “I have a room with bath reserved for today,” Vera said in the aloof voice which covered timidity, when she faced the hotel clerk across the register. The young man smiled as he coffked his head to watch her write her name. “Miss V. V. Cameron? Yes, we have your wire, Miss Cameron. I hope you will enjoy your visit, Miss Cameron. Pretty warm in the city, isn’t it? New York is all right in the spring and the fall, but give me the country in the summer time.” “Thank you. I’m sure I shall enjoy Minnetonka,” Vee-Vee answered briefly. “Show Miss Cameron to rat>m SlB, Dick,” the affable clerk directed the bellboy. Vera had turned away to follow the boy, when it occurred to her to ask the clerk the closing hours for New York-bound mail. She stepped toward the desk again, but hesitated when she saw that the young couple who had so closely observed her in the bus were at the desk, the woman leaning forward to whisper confidentially to the clerk, who was listening with amazement. When he raised his eye£, undoubtedly 'to stare after Vera, and saw her coming toward him again, he flushed as if he had been caught in an indiscretion. Vee-Vee resisted a strong impulse to run away—anywhere. Instead, she raised her chin haughtily, waited until the embarrassed young couple had turned away, then put her question coolly. “Mail leaves for New York at nine in the morning, at one in the afternoon and at eight in the evening,” the clerk informed her hastily. “And—er— Miss—er —

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Cameron, if you don’t like . your room, would prefer a suite, perhaps, I’m sure it could be arranged.^ Vera wondered why he spoke so eagerly, with almost servile deference. “Thank you. I shall let you know if I desire to change,” she said coolly. As she followed the boy down the long, richly furnished lobby toward the elevators she felt horribly conspicuous and alone. When she had tipped him and closed the door of her room she was seized with a violent fit of trembling. She stood clutching the edge of the dressing table, staring at herself with fearwidened green eyes. “Why are they watching me like that?” she whispered with cold lips. “Do I look like a thief or—or an impostor? And why did that clerk’s manner change so toward me? Maybe it’s because I look as if I were a millionaire’s daughter, as Jerry said. Oh, I’m foolish tp worry! Maybe this is just a gossipy sort of summer hotel, where everybody speculates on everybody else and tries to find out every one’s business. “Well—they won’t learn much about Miss V. V. Cameron!” she nodded to her reflection with a wicked little smile. She lifted off her hat, hung it in the deep, electrically lighted closet, and started off on a tour of inspection of her small domain —her own apartment for the next two weeks. It was not a large room, but It was 'so exquisitely decorated and furnished that Vera drew a deep breath of thrilled wonder. In all her repressed, unhappy, penny-pinching life she had never seen a room to compare with it. The walls were covered with a French gray tapestry yallpaper. It was a corner room overlooking the lake. The wide, deep windows were hung with jade green taffeta, looped back to sfiow gauze-thin gold silk inner curtains. “Even if I don’t find Schuyler, it will be worth it all to live for two weeks in a hotel like this and

BARN YIELDS LIQUOR Prominent Peru Business Man Held After Raid. By United Press PERU, Ind., Aug. 4.—Lincoln H. Scott, 65, prominent and wealthy retired business man, was at liberty under $1,500 bond today on charges of violating the liquor law. Police arrested him when they found a huge distilling plant and a quantity of liquor in a barn rented in his name. The barn ostensibly was used for breeding chickens. Scott formerly operated a hotel, saloon and theaters here.

a room like this,” she told herself happily. She was lifting her heavy suitcase to the little slatted stand to unpack it when a knock came at the door. She opened it to find a porter and a white-uniformed maid outside. “Your trunks have come, Miss, and the housekeeper said she had orders from the office for me to help you unpack,” the maid told her, bobbing her head in a quaint bow. Vera was surprised, but the maid would never have guessed it. Was such service included in the room rates, she wondered* Or would she have to pay extra—? The porter wheeled the trunks into the room, deposited them, upright, in the big closet, grunted his thanks for the 50-cent tip she gave him, and left the maid to her work. “The dining room's open for lunch now, Miss.” The mkid came out of the closet with her arms full of Vee-Vee's new dresses. “I don’t suppose you will want to change for lunejj, will you, Miss? They usually don’t, not when they come on the noon train. And you look lovely, Miss, if you don’t mind me saying so.” Vera was wearing the suit which had been her first purchase after her transformation from a plain girl into a beauty. She had saved it for the trip, knowing that she could not find a more appropriate costume for summer traveling. She stopped only to run a comb through the sculptured, flat waves of her hair, and to flirt a powder puff over her cheeks, and to touch up her beautiful mouth with the geranium lip salve which Peach Bloom’s chemist had concocted especially for her. “Yes. Miss, you sure do look beautiful,” the maid went on, In an admiring but deferential voice. “Much prettier than your pictures., if you don’t mind me saying so—” * “My pictures!” Vee-Vee exclaimed. her voice sounding angry and arrogant in her surprise. “What do you mean?” “There, now! I wasn’t to mention a word, Miss, seeing as how you don't want folks to know or you wouldn’t be using another name—excuse me. Miss, will you? And don’t breathe a word of what I said to the office of the housekeeper, Miss, or I'll be fired sure!” Vera checked the startled stream of questions that tried to force their way out of her suddenly cold lips., Whatever this mystery was, she certainly could not discuss it with a maid, who would only be getting into trouble if she did talk. One thing was evident, she told herself, as she descended In an elevator that carried no other passenger; the young couple in the bus had mistaken her for some person of importance, had thought they recognized her from printed pictures; had confided their discovery to the hotel clerk, who had immediately accepted their identification of her as authentic. - But—who was she supposed to be? Some movie star resting between pitcures and using her real name for a change? A Broadway actress seeking peace Incognito? Then, as she was just stepping into the dining room, a flash of understanding illuminated the darkness of her bewilderment. That picture that Jerry had found In Stafford's desk! “Who in the world am I?” VeeVee asked herself, helplessly, as she was being conducted to a table. Was that what Jerry had warned her about in his mysterious letter —that she would be mistaken for another girl? And then In an Instant all conjecture was for the moment wiped out of her mind. For she was looting into the dark, brilliant eyes of the man of the elevator—the man with whom she had fallen in love at sight, the man who had looked through her as If she were nonexistent. She had found “Schuyler.” And his eyes were looking into hers with startled, glad surprise. (To Be Continued) It Is quite bewildering, Vee-Vee finds, to be mistaken for someone else. Even Schuyler Is tooled.

Plant Foundation Ready By Times Special ANDERSON, Ind., Aug. 4.—The foundation for the new $25,000 local branch plant of the Maring Wire Steel Company has been completed. Erection of steel work will begin within a few days.

Ballroom Dancing SUMMER RATES Private Instruction MISS BERRY 216 N. Meridian. Lin. 5906

Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry Repairing and Manufacturing J. P. MULLALLY 531 State Life Bldg. 37tli Year In Business

ONLY 50c A IVEEK Ladles’ Wrist WATCHES KAY JEWELRY Cos! 137 West Washington St.

666 Is a prescription for Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria. It kills the germs

CANARY SPECIAL! Bring this ment to either of ourSßßk stores this week, buy 2 lbs. Everltt’s Mixed Bird Seed at 25(1 and receive FREE one lOC Hnl- If ler’s Health Grit. w Everitt’sitaed Stores 5 N. Ala. Stl 227 W. Wash. St.

- SoKwrwexs UOVX yro9ose -Wo *\rvterest \0 - WO carruvrco, cKar^es. gmmm Washington Street at Capitol Avenue

Eddie Says:

Pbeat^ [THIS? 1

lour Guide to Smarter Style. Quality Clothes and Genuine Gower Price* I There Is no heed to wear clothes that nre not tip to the minute 1n ' style and fabrics, nor is there need to pay high prices for clothes thnt DO meet your idea?— Traugott offers you the kind of clothes you want and you can pay for theratW u&otts M, ( 2,j wtsr w\sniiroTOS street/

“Ex-Cel” Itfrrfemc? “IDEAL” Plate MMsS 1 • p l*e You may pay all you wish for a plate, but you will find nothing T/nner OK T OM/tor Qol- • p, * nd ‘ d p,ata '* n p l 4 to compare with thi. exception- UPP*? hOWBT o€t with a host of friend..'* Perfect at aet of teeth at anything like ' ,n tvorkman.hlp. good. long-wear-this price. Beautifully made. plate "you can 'not equal In the GUARANTEED TO SATISFY. . 7 1,. - itate for till, price. . Bridge-Work s fIHSO .'em aoso U JZ~ Lowest Prices ■ EASY TERMS My price., because of large volume. NONE BETTER AT ANY Tou who desire It may take advanare the lowest prices possible, con- PRICES tage of my very easy terms and sistent with GOOD DENTISTRY. J pay as work progresses. PAINLESS EXTRACTION

FOUNTAIN SQUARE BRANCH OFFICE 1108 Shelby Street —Second Floor AU Work Done In Our Own Laboratory Phone—Dßevel 7800 HOURS—B A. M. to BP. M.

Prepare for Opportunity’s Knocks Opportunity la going to knock at your door; maybe It has already. But whether It has or not, it will be showing up from time to time la the future. And, you naturally want to be prepared for the good things thnt it will offer you. It is safe to say thnt most of the good things it hai to offer will be found In the business world. This school specialises In giving young men and women tho preparation they should have In order to accept opportunity's call to desirable business positions. This is the Indiana Business College of Indianapolis. The others are at Marlon, Munele, Logansport, Anderson, Kokomo, Lafayette, Columbus. Richmond and Vincennes—Ora E. Buts, President. Get In touch with thqf point you prefer, or see, write or telephone Fred W. Case, Principal Pennsylvania and Vermont, l'lrsi Door North Y. W. C. A., Indianapolis

IVORY r u ... SOFT SOAP Care ul Handling —WATEß A most satisfactory and economical laundry service DRexel 6300 r nr • M A Pound Wet Thurd *y im C __ _ Friday #■ Minimum Wooh Saturday Bundle Only " Jp *l.Ol STERLING c lhe Ivory Soap LAUNDRY Every Kind of Cleaning Service

Indiana National Bank

Capital, Surplus and Undivided Profits *4,500,000 Our large financial responsibility, together with the security of our strong and modern Safe Deposit Vaults, under excellent management, offers o-r patrftns all th® advantages to be desired. Safe Deposit Boxes and Trunk Storage at Moderate Prices We Welcome Your Visit

10-PAY PLAN!

INDIANA’S FASTEST GROWING DENTAL OFFICE

Dr. Forshee MAIN OFFICE 22% N. Penn. St. Second Floor Hours—B a. m. to Bp. m. Riley 0708

NOW OPEN

’AITG. 4, 1927

it

DR. PORSHEE’S METHODS OF PAINLESS EXTRACTION USED EXCLUSIVELY EXAMINATION IS FREE

RE-NEW That Di-Fitting PLATE Wa will ra-bulld and your old worn plate, beautifully at a very small cost. Come in.