Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 81, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 August 1927 — Page 14

PAGE 14

PRINTERS VOTE i DOWN 7-HOUR DAY PROPOSAL Delegates, Visitors Leave at Close of Jubilee Convention. Delegates and visitors to Diamond Jubilee convention of International Typographical Union today left Indianapolis following close of the seventy-second annual session Friday night. A proposal which would have placed the convention on record in favor of a seven-hour day was voted down by the convention. The eighthour day was established twentytwo years ago. Salaries of twelve representatives discharged by President Charles P. Howard last November, but who continued tr serve after the executive council held their dismissal illegal. will not be paid, the convention decided. Green Is Speaker With administration faction members voting a protest, progressives enacted a resolution placing the vice presidents, administration members, under “direction and control of the president,” a progressive. John W. Hays, secretary-treasurer, and an administrationist, is exempted from progressive domination. William Green, American Federation of Labor president, spoke at the closing session. Commenting on the Sacco-Vanzetti case, he said organized labor entertains doubts as to guilt of the two convicted men, but has nothing to do with extremists. The speaker stressed the importance of close organization and denounced the practice of issuance of court injunctions in lrbor disputes. Warns Against Dissension A warning to printers against extreme factionalism in their organization was sounded by Green. President Howard urged delegates to carry back to their locals a spirit of harmony. W. J. Spires, arrangements committee chairman, was presented a gold watch. Other committee members wdre given fountain pens. SLING SHOTS SEIZED Rushville Police Confiscate Weapons of Boyhood Bu Times Special RUSHVILLE. Ind.. Aug. 13.—Four of those weapons of boyhood, sling shots, repose on the desk of Police John Kennedy here, and he says others will be added to the collection. Owners of the four were deprived of their property after several persons complained they had been targets of a pebble barrage. One woman was struck so hard that she fainted. When she recovered she notified police and the boys shortly afterward listened to some earnest conversation by Chief Kennedy. CUT FARE, RAISE~WAGES Railroad Makes Move to Encourage More Patronage Bn United Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 13.—Taking a tip from Henry Ford and his Ironton railway, the Mount Vernon, Alexandria and Washington Railway Company and the Arlington and Fairfax Railway Company have announced cut fares and raised wages. They expect to get more patronage that way.

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Yeomen of State Planning to Build Indiana Cottage at Home for Orphans

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A group of City of Childhood hoys and girls off for a bus ride.

Erection of Indiana Yeomen of a cottage in the City of Childhood, Elg,n, 111., for use of the orphaned sov>s and daughters of members of the order is being planned by local Yeomen. Tentative aim is to permit each organization of the State to furnish one room in the Indiana cottage. At present five cottages are completed, with more under construction.

I&PENNY /PRINCESS ‘ iwOTtevic eW OH (dime Qustin

BEGIN HEBE TODAY VERA CAMERON, efficient prtvste secretary, consents to let JERRY MACKLYN, advertising manager for Peach Bloom Cosmetics, transform her Into a beauty, after she falls instantly In love with a man who Ignores her. In refashioning ner, the beauty specialist uses as a model a picture which Jerry finds In his desk. Vera la so lcvely after the change that Jerry .'alls •In lore with her. He learns she wanted to be beautiful so she could go to Lake Minnetonka on her vacation to meet the man she is in love with. At the summer hotel, Vera, nicknamed Vee-Vee, meets the man she came to tee, SCHUYLER BMYTHE. He and the other guests mistake her for an exBrlncess, the wealthy VIVIAN CRANALL. who. after a divorce In Paris, has disappeared. In her room, Vee-Vee opens a letter Jerry gave her just before her departure and learns that he unknowingly used Vivian Crandall's picture In refashioning her and that ne Is fearful of the consequences. She goes ahead without further eflort to convince people of her true identity. While she ana Schuyler are In the garden. Nan surprises them In a sentimental moment. A knock at her door late that night startles Vera. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXI ,i|— —it, hello, Nan! Won’t you come in?” Vee-Vee curled her lips in a welcoming smile but beneath her casual greeting her heart was pounding. "Thanks, Miss Cameron,” Nan Fosdick said brusquely, making no effort to smile. Vee-Vee watched the girl’s big, splendid body as it swung with a mannish stride across the room, to drop into the only straight chair. It was as if she scorned comfort for her body when her heart was writhing with angry pain. “If only she knew how to dress,” Vee-Vee thought pityingly. She placed a little flat round pillow of emerald green satin iiehind her head, choosing it instinctively because she knew that it would enhance the brilliant green of her eyes and contrast with the burnished copper of her hair. She was becoming a little more used to her beauty, arranged lovely settings for it almost automatically. A couple of months before sne would not have given a thought to the selection of a pillow. Nan Fosdick laced her big brown hands over her hunched knees, throwing the billowy folds of her pathetically unbecoming frock of orchid taffeta into awkward angles. Vee-Vee noted that she had her straight, wiry black hair crimped in a harsh, mechanical marcel, that her small black eyes glittered above patches of badly applied orangetinted rouge. Poor thing! She had been trying to make herself alluring, feminine, in a tragic effort to compete with her rival’s sleek, sophisticated perfection of beauty. “Don’t look at me like that—sizing me up, feeling sorry for me because I’m such a frump!” Nan Fosdick burst out. “Dear Nan!” Vee-Vee said softly. “I didn't mean to look at you like that. Is there anything I can do for you? Though I hope you only came to pay me a call." She wanted to touch those tightly locked hands with tender, comforting fingers but she knew she did not dare. “Yes, there Is something you can do for me!” Nan Fosdick cried angrily. “You can let Schulyer Smythe alone 1 You don’t want him! You’re only playing with him, amusing yourself with a little fish because there isn’t a big one in this puddle—not big enough for you anyway!” “Nan, you mustn’t talk like .that.” Vee-Vee spoke gently but firmly. "You’ll be sorry tomorrow, hate yourself for having given yourself away to another woman. Let me order some tea and little cakes sent up—You’ll feel better after a cup of hot tea—” “Tea! Ye gods!” the younger girl snorted angrily. “I don’t want tea —with you! Everyone here is bowing down to earth before you but I won’t toady to you, just because you have forty millions and have been a princess! I—”

“Nan!” Vee?Vee interrupted sharply. “I’ve told everyone that all that is not true, that I’m Just plain Vee-Vee Cameron,” she went on recklessly. After all, why not convince this hostile girl, who would be glad to believe her, and take the consequences of Nan’s gossip? “Oh, sure, you’ve said so, but do you think anyone believes you? It’s your own business, I suppose, if you want to run around the country with an alias, but you know you can't fool anyone with that—that face of yours! “If you’d really wanted! to come here incognito why didn’t you get

Hoosier Homestead, No. 92, is the local unit of the Brotherhood of American Yeomen. Each member pays a monthly fee of ten cents for the City of Childhood fund. The Indianapolis lodge has a welfare department and a visiting nurse to help care for the sick. Yeomen City of Childhood Is situated in the Fox River valley, within an hour's ride of Chicago. Six hundred eighteen acres of improved

a wig and a pair of spectacles? You’re having the time of your life, pretending to be incognito, but you’re ruining my life—and Sky’s too. Youll break his heart and laugh, Just as you’ve always done. “Oh, I’m not such a dumb kid that I haven’t heard gossip, Miss Cameron,” she added, with bitter emphasis. "Oh, won’t you please go away? You must be tired of the game by now.” Her voice changed suddenly to the humble pleading of a heartbroken child. “I—l can’t leave—yet,” Vee-Vee answered slowly. “I can’t explain, Nan, but I can’t leave just yet. I don’t want to make you unhappy. I’ve been worried sick about you, you poor child—” “Don’t ‘poor child’ me!" Nan cried passionately. "I won’t have it! All I ask of you is to give me back what belongs to me! You don’t want him. really! All your life you’ve been beautiful, rich, sought after. Can’t you let me have the only man I’ve ever loved, the only man that’s ever loved me?” “Did he love you, Nan?” Vee-Vee asked in a level voice that concealed the panic that whipped her heart to frantic racing. “He said he did! He—he simplly followed me about everywhere I went—before you came. We played golf and tennis together, swam together, rode together, morning, noon and night. “He—he said he’d rather dance with me than any of the slatlike little flappers because I—l was so light on my feet!” she ended on a sob. “Had he asked you to marry him, Nan?” "Yes, he had!” Nan Fosdick asserted violently. “And he’s a liar if he says he didn’t! He asked me the Saturdayl night before you came, and I was going to tell mother on Sunday. And then—and then—” “And then I came,” Vee-Vee supplied softly, but her voice sounded flat and dead in her own ears. “I asked him if he’s proposed to you, Nan, and he said he hadn’t. But— I believe you,” she added hastily as the girl started to make a violent protest. “He—he didn’t exactly propose to me,” Nan Fosdick confessed, collapsing suddenly. “But he made it plain that he would If It were not for the' fact that I—l was rich and he was poor. I told him that it was my own money—my grandfather left It to me unconditionally. I’ll get it all—nearly a million dollars —when I’m twenty-one.” “And that will be—when?” VeeVee asked. "I’ll be twenty-one July first,” Nan told her, more quietly. “Oh, Miss—Cameron, If you knew how much it meant to me to find someone who wanted me, who loved me! Someone 1' could love, I mean,” she added honestly. “There have been lots of men who would have married me for my money, but I didn’t want them, and I knew they wanted only my money not me. They didn’t like to dance with me,” she lowered her voice pathetically. “But Sky was different. He—he really cared. I know he did. “He—he thought I was wonderful because I could go around the golf course In par and almost made the national women's tennis finals, and could swim like—like an titter, as he said. He admired me. He didn’t mind if J wasn’t little and soft and fluttery like other girls. He said once that I’d make a superb mother —oh!” The tears came at last, and the brown hands flew to the brown face. “You would, Nan, you’d make a wonderful mother,” Vee-Vee said softly. “Tell me, Nan, do you think he still cares for you, that he would come back to you If I left?" Her heart swelled with emotion She thought then that she could make any sacrifice for the girl who crouched In grief before her. “Yes, he would!” Nan sobbed, the words muffled by her hands. “He only wants to nab you quick because you have oceans of monev and a high social position.” “You believe that of the man you say you love? You can call him a fortune-hunter and still love him?’’ Vee-Vee demanded sternly. “I don’t care what he is, I love him!’’.the girl cried desperately. “And I want him no matter wha* his reasons for marrying me might

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

land were purchased recently and are available for future development of the project. Fifty-five orphans, children of Yeomen, comprise the first contingent received at the home. Every semblance of an ‘institution” is avoided in an attempt tp make real homes for the children.' Each cotcage bouses a family of Yeomen children with a cottage mother to care for them.

be. But he did love me! I know he did! Oh, please go away—” “Nan Fosdick,” Vee-Vee said slowly and sternly, “I want you to tell me the truth. The whole trutn now! No quibbling! Did Schuyler Smythe ever say to you, ‘I love you’ and ‘Will you iparry me?” I want the truth now. I have a right to know, after what you have done—coming to me as you’ve done tonight!” Vee-Vee had risen, her blood aroused at last. Why, everything, everything was slipping away from her. because her heart was soft, because she had not yet learned to be ruthless, as even this girl was! She stood over the huddled girl in the chair, took Nan’s chin between her fingers and tilted her face upward so that she could search those small, angry, black eyes. “He made love to me. He—he kissed me once,” Nan stammered. “He followed me around, hinted that he’d ask me to marry him if it were not chat I was rich and he poor—” “So you proposed to him on Saturday night, told him that you’d make your mother consent, though you knew she would be bif’—'v appointed that you hadn’t landed a man with social posit'on. m...a the truth, isn’t it?” “Oh, I hate you!” Nan Jerked her chin away, sprang to her feet. “I tell you I know he wanted to marry me. Isn’t that enough? I was a fool to come to you! "I should have known that a woman like you would have no pity, no decency, when It came to men! As If you hadn’t had enough In your time!’’ she flung over her shoulder bitterly as she plunged toward the door. "As I see it,” Vee-Vee said coolly, though she was trembling in every muscle, "we two are very foolish girls making a vulgar fuss over a man. He has not asked me to marry him, and according to your own admission, he has not asked you. I think we both might have the decency to let the man speak for himself.” "Then you’ll marry him if he does ask you?” Nan Fosdick turned at the door to demand incredulously. You!” Against her will her voice was charged with the awe whicn everyone seemed to feel for fortv million dollars. "I don’t think he’ll ask—me.” knowln G that her words would puzzle the other girl. It was true, she thought sickly. Schuyler Symthe would not ask Vera Victoria Cameron to marry Si? a s*n‘ “ k prtn “ M vh,i ’ Nan Fosdlck’s hand was on the knob when the electric bell shrilled She flung open the door, revealing Mrs. Bannister, dressed in the summer coatsult in which Vee-Vee had first seen her, in the hotel bus ’Are you In, Vee-Vee?” she called in her cheerful, gushy voice, “i just popped In to say good-by for a My mother 1* 111 again tZ lY 3 ' a wlre from the docszsittisr - “ AnvtH) catc T Wng 1116 “tdnlght train. fSTSL I^ d0 for you whue Nar* th Clty ’ darUn * ? Or for you, xr 1 can * e t me 8° with you!" an Fwdick cried, throwing up her head defiantly. ,“i_i can’t here another hour!” (To be Continued) JertT' V VL *.1 U <U*®OBrUn ntwi mTT'SY* ? ant Bix only 81.44. Reaches over 250,000 readers SiS,iS* UMAto3soo ' Yo ““ EVERITT’S T Chick Feed A special! r\y SO Lb*. Sfrotch. 00 V lba. Laying Muh, 1 \ .jCrx^Z. lb. Panacea Poultry Tonic, Delivered. 0•) fcJb. .VBaftrT All for $6 gajgßj|jggLg^i Offer good till Aug. SO EVERITT'S SEED STORES S N. Via, St. til W. Wash. St. Lincoln 4855 Main 4740

CENTURY-OLD CHURCH PLANS EVENTSUNDAY Liberty Baptists Will Observe Birthday Near Greensburg. Celebration of the one hundredth anniversary of the Liberty Baptist church, six miles southwest of Greensburg, to be held Sunday, is among various events of the coming week in Indiana. Rev. F. M. Huckleberry, oldest surviving foi - mer pastor of the church, will be the speaker. A dinner will be served at noon. A musical program has been arranged under the supervision of Elda Pavey. Baptists of Boone county will hold their second annual all-day meeting Sunday at Memorial Park. Lebanon. Diamond's third annual homecoming will be held in Benell’s Grove north of the town Sunday. The thirty-third annual Fountain, Park assembly is in session near Remington, having opened today for sixteen days. Veterans’ Reunion The 160th regiment, Indiana Volunteer infantfy, Spanish-American war veterans, will hold their annual reunion in Huntington Monday. The regiment includes Cos. A, Marion; Cos. B, Decacur; Cos. C, Lefayette; Cos. D. Wabash; Cos. E, Bluff ton; Cos. P, Ossian; Cos. G, Columbia City; Cos. H, Warsaw; Cos. I, Tipton; Cos. K, Huntington; Cos. L, Anderson, and Cos. M, Logan?port. The fifteenth annual session qf the Indiana Baptist Assembly will open at Franklin college, Frenklin, Monday to continue until Aug. 26. In connection with the assembly, the Baptist Young Peoples’ Union will hold a State session Aug. 20 to 21. The assembly offers sixteen courses in religious training. Fairmount will be host to the seventy-ninth annual Indiana conference and camp meeting of the Wesleyan Methodist church, beginning Monday and continuing until Aug. 28. United Brethren Session United Brethren Churches of Christ in Indiana will hold their ninety-ninth annual conference at the United Brethren church in Princeton beginning Tuesday, for five days. Bishop H. H. Fout. Indianapolis, will preside. The second summer training school of the Midwest State Farm Bureaus will begin at Cedar Lake Tuesday. Clay City’s annual picnic and homecoming will be held Wednesday. UNCOVER ANCIENT CITY Walls Similar to Those of Jericho; Bronze Age Civilization Bu United Press JERUSALEM, Aug. 13.—Walls similar to the walls of Jericho and the ruins of a city have been found, it was announced today, by excavators at A1 Sukenik and Tel El Jereishah. The civilization appeared to have been that of the bronze age.

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Money at 5 y 2 % Interest First Mortgage on City Business or Residence Properties Let Us Explain Our Plan Aetna Trust & Savings Cos. 23 North Pennsylvania Street ROSS H. WALLACE, President

Orphan Feast SUNDAY, AUG. 14th., 1927 —AT— J General Protestant Orphan Home 1404 South State Street (Take Prospect or Minnesota Car) Church Services at 10:00 A. M. Band Concert and Address at 2:00 P. Af. Ladies Auxiliary Will Serve Dinner and Supper Everybody Welcome Plenty of Free Parking Space I

Brain Teaser Answers

Here are the answers to the Bible quiz on page 4: 1. The picture show?. Joshua’s men setting up the twelve stones in the midst of the Jordan, in the place where the feet of the priests which bore the ark of the covenant stood.—Joshua 4:9. 2. Joshua was the son of Nun.— Joshua 1:1. 3. The Israelites were forbidden to shout on the first six days that they marched around the walls of Jerhico.—Joshua 6:10-16. 4. Joshur captured Ai by appearing to flee before its soldiers while the warriors of the Israelites were ambushed behind the city.—Joshua 7:3-8. 5. Christ was in the wilderness forty days following his baptism.— Mark 1:13. 6. The twelve apostles were Peter, James, John. Andrew, Philip, Bartholomew, Matthew, Thomas, Thaddeus, Simon the Cananite, James, the son of Alphaeus, ar.d Judas.— Mark 3:17-19. 7. James and John, sons of Zebedee, were surnamed Boanerges, the sons of Thunder.—Mark 3:18. 1 Nehemiah gave charge of Jerusalem to Hanani and Hananiah.— Nehemiah 7:2. 9. Nehemiah found 42.360 in the congregation which first came to Jerusalem from Babylon, besides 7,337 servants.—Nehemiah 7:66. 10. The book of Psalms begins with “Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly.”—Psalms 1:1.

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AGED MAN IS KILLEDBY AUTO Cassius Curtis Struck While Walking in Street. One person was killed and three others injured in traffic accidents here Friday nigjit.' Cassius P. Curtis, 65, of Northwestern Ave. and Fall Creek Blvd., was struck and killed by an auto driven by Kenneth R. Glidewell, 59 N. Warman Ave., in the 5400 block on W. Washington St. Curtis was walking in the middle of the street.

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Glidewell was arrested on invol-' untary manslaughter charge, “others injured: Mrs. Mattie Davis, 906 Fairfield Ave.; Florence Bauman, 6, daughter of Edward Bauman, 808 E. Minnesota St., and Mrs. Bertha Leonard, 34, of 85., Udell St. Motorist Fatally Hurt Bu Times Special MbNTPELIER, Ind., Aug. 13. John A. Mertz, 47, is dead of injuries suffered when an automobile he was driving crashed into a truck.

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