Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 82, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 August 1927 — Page 12

PAGE 12

DEMOCRATS OF DAKOTA WORRY OVERALSMITH Special Pow-Wow Called by State Chairman to Discuss Prospects. By Vnitcd Press RAPID CITY, S. D., Aug. 15. Democrats of this State are so worried about what is going to be done about the presidential boom for Governor A1 Smith of New York that they are going to get together in September to attempt to determine where their ten votes will go in the next Democratic convention. F. W. Bilger, chairman of the Democratic State committee, has invited every county chairman in the State and the entire State central committee, sixty-four in all, to the pow-wow. Bilger, who is considered an antiSmith and pro-McAdoo man because he held this State delegation for William G. McAdoo in the battle against Smith at the last Madison Square Garden convention, says the meeting will merely discuss prospects of Democratic action. Meeting an Innovation Democrats here have never before gotten together in such a meeting prior to the regular Democratic State convention which is called to select candidates for proposal men at the peculiar primary they hold here. The convention to select proposal men will be held in February s nd the primary will be held in May to choose national, convention delegates. The- real purpose of summoning an early unofficial convention is to decide what will be done about the Smith movement; to determine how Democratic leaders throughout the State feel toward Smith. Smith Men Active There has been much Smith talk out here. In 1924 South Dakota went for McAdoo and stuck to him to the last. North Dakota gave Smith six votes. It is understood that Smith men have been through both States sounding out sentiment and making all possible arrangements to swing the State. But some leaders are reluctant to go to Smith and they want to fight out the question among themselves before the convention or primary.

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BEGIN HERE TODAY VERA CAMERON, efficient private secretary, consents to let JERRY MACKLYN, advertising manager for Peach Bloom Cosmetics, transform her Into a beauty, after she falls Instantly in love with man who Ignores her. In refashioning tier, the beauty specialist uses as a model a picture which Jerry finds in his desk. Vera is so lovely after the change that Jerry falls in love 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 see. SCHUYLER SMYTHE. He and the other guests mistake her for an ex-p-lncess, the wealthy VIVIAN CRANDALL, who, after a divorce in Paris, has disappeared. In her room, Vee-Vee opens a letter Jerry gave her just before her departure and learr.j that he unknowingly used Vivian Crandall's picture in refashioning her and that he Js fearful of the consequences. She goes ahead without further effort to convince people of her true identity. While she and 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 XXII —.-LTHOUGH she waj awake A early on Wednesday mornL-* *•! ing. Vee-Vee lay listlessly In bed, privacy insured by the “Please do not disturb” sign which she had hung on her doorknob the night before, after her tempestuous Interview with Nan Fosdick. Poor Nan! Vee-Vee wanted to trample upon the sympathy which kept rising in her throat. Why should she take it so to heart that that bisr, homely rich girl had lost the man she loved? If Schuyler Smythe had been about to marry her for her money, wasn’t she well rid of him? - Os course he had never loved Nan! The id,’a was ridiculous. Probably he, too, had felt that same unwelcome, nagging sympathy for her that made Vee-Vee so uncomfortable now. Poor Nan! Poor Schuyler! By an accident—a foolish accident for which Jerry Macklyn was responsible—she, Vera Victoria Cameron, was turning two lives topsyturvy. Wouldn’t It be the only decent thing for her to do to go away? But she had let Nan Fosdick do that. She had let Nan be more generous that she was. But Nan had known that she was defeated. Suddenly a sharp thought prodded her into a flush of fear. Schuyler had been afraid that a departing guest might take the news back to New York that the strangely missing Vivian Crandall was at Lake Minetonka. Now two guests, both of whom thought they had cause to hate her—Nan for having taken Schuyler from her, Mrs. Bannister for Vee-Vee’s increasing coolness to her—were on their "Vay to New York. They would reach the city by noon. At any moment after noon a telegram might come, exposing Vera Victoria Cameron as a fraud. A fraud! The flush of fear faded suddenly, leaving the giri shivering with cold. A fraud, an imposter. Why hadn’t she possessed the courage to force her true identity upon them all—Schuyler, at least, 3ince he was the only one she cared about? The reason reared its head in her tortoured nfind, but she beat It back. But It persisted, until at last she burst into tears and let it dominate her mind. She ha ’ not told Schuyler, or, rather, hau not made any real effort to convince him of the truth, because she was afraid that at least a part of his worship of Vivian Crandall had been centered upon her forty millions, upon her breath-takingly high social position. Would he have loved, for five hopeless years, a Miss Nobody whom he had met but once? If Vivian Crandall herself were suddenly stripped of social position and wealth, would he still love her quite so ardently, be willing to give up Nan Fosdick and her “nearly a million dollars” for a pair of green eyes and an adorable mouth? She had taunted Nan with loving a man whom she believed to be a fortune-hunter. And yet she was doing the same thing herself. Oh, but she didn’t believe, she told herself frantically, beating her hot pillow with a clenched fist. Nan Fosdick had simply been trying to hold Schuyler Smythe by fair means or foul. She had known that the surest way to disgust a great heiress with him was to accuse him of fortune-hunting, an evil which Is forever stalking rich girls, turning them sour upon love and life. “If I lie here thinking much longer I’ll go crazy,” Vee-Vee told herself vehemently. “I’ll find out today whether it Is I that he loves, or forty million dollars. I’ll tell him the truth, force this thing to a showdown. But—maybe I won’t have to tell him. A telegram may come from New York before I have a chance —” She rose on her elbow, seized the phone and in a crisp, arrogant voice—.the voice which she unconsciously assumed whenever she was frightened—ordered her mail and a

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morning paper to be brought to her room. Then she ordered breakfast —coffee, toasted English muffins and sliced peaches. She had expected a letter from Jerry Macklyn in answer to hers written on Sunday and there It was, along with a thin envelope addressed in her Aunt Flora’s hand writing. The letters and the paper arrived on the tray with her breakfast, but she had a curious hesitancy about opening them. She poured herself a cup of the hot, fragrantt coffee and drank It rapidly, grateful for the Instant, revivifying effect It had upon her jangled nerves. She was smiling almost cheerfully when she opened Flora Cartwright’s two scrawled sheets of scented, cream-colored stationery. “My darling Vee-Vee,” Flora Cartwright’s letter began. “Have you landed him ypt? I suppose it is a little early for that question, but he’s a fool If he isn’t in love with you by this time. "I almost hate you for being so beautiful and so young. Peter Darrow is mooning around like a sick calf, begging for your address, which of course I won’t give him. I know the disgusting young cub doesn’t interestt you any more than he does me. “Jerry Macklyn is proving a great disappointtment. He seems to prefer the company of a snippy little peroxide blondo to my own society. I saw them at the theater last night. I Imagine she’s that Rosemary Fitch you’ve talked about. “Please don’t stay any longer than two weeks, darling. I may be driven to marrying Jack Preston all over again if I’m left to my own dev ces much i'inger. He is a dear, though he’s gutting to look quite middle-aged and settled. “He made a neat little killing; In Wall Street on Monday. I’m quite seriously tempted. Maybe we’ll come to Lake Minnetonka on our honeymoon and surprise you. Write me all about your progress with the mysterious sheik. “Why can’t you be frank with me and tell me his name? Your devoted Aunt Flora.” A cynical smiie twisted the delicate curves of Vee-Vee’s beautiful mouth. So Jerry Macklyn was consoling himself with Rosemary Fitch! She might have known he would. “He had admitted that he was “susceptible,” and Rosemary had been quite shamelessly determined to get in her most deadly work while Vee-Vee was away. Well, let her have him! “But the angry vigor with which Vee-Vee’s fingers crushed the sheets of her aunt’s letter into a crackling ball did not indicate a cheerful acquiescence in Rosemary’s conquest. "I’ll have to write Aunt Flora a special delivery, begging her not to come here on her honeymoon if she does marry Uncle Jack again,” she worried, as she dipped a spoon into the chilled peaches. “Goodness knows this situation is complicated enough without having Aunt Flora here, vamping Schuyler and spilling the beans, If beans are going to be split; I want to do the spilling myself.” It was not until she had quite finished her breakfast that she opened Jerry’s thick letter. She had an obscure fear that its contents might spoil her appetite. “Dearest Galatea,” Jerry began whimsically, "Glad you’re having a good time- I hope th& mysterious magnet that drew you to Minnetonka is engaged to another girl, though I don’t want you to be hurt. "I’m getting quite an education in being hurt myself, and I’m still able to work and take nourishment.” “And to go gallivanting around to musical revues with Rosemary Fitch!” Vee-Vee Interrupted her reading scornfully. “I’m up to my ears In work and it’s so damned hot that I feel like I’m swinjnlng around in hot oil. Miss Fitch can’t hold ft candle to you as a secretary, and the work is pilling'up. But she’s a cheerful little dimwit, better on a party than at her typewriter.” “Well, at least he’s honest!” VeeVee exploded, rattling the sheets of Jerry’s letter angrily. “It’s easy to see that the stock of Blonds Preferred hasn’t taken a tumble since I left New York.” “I rather imagine my fears for you haven’t been realized, or I would have haA a wire from you. This will sound nke Greek to you if you haven’t read the letter I gave

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you at the train, and I hope you haven’t had occasion to. >• “But I want to impress on you that If you do get into a jam I’ll fly to your assistance—and when I say fly, I mean fly. Whew! It’s hot. Why don’t you invite me up to Minnetonka for the week-end? I’ll promise to be good, not to Interfere with your campaign, If the sheik Is still unattached. And if he is engaged to the other girl, maybe you’d like to see old red-headed Jerry. I’m enclosing a letter from Rosemary Fitch, fihe asked for your address, but I wouldn’t give it to her, told her I’d send her letter on to you. Wo all miss you. For what It’s worth to you—l love you, Jerry.” “Dear Jerry!” > Vee-Vee murmured, holding the stiff sheets of the letter against her cheek caressingly. “I suppose I ought to invite him. He sounds depressed. The heat, probably.” But she knew that it was not only the heat tliat accounted for the letter that was so unlike the exurberant. Jerry she had grown so fond pf. Another life that she had turned topsy-turvy! But Jerry would soon right himself. He was already consoling himself with a “cheerful little dimwit.” That last thought reminded her of Rosemary’s letter. It was a gushy, slangy, newsy letter, packed with gossip of the offices. Only two paragraphs Interested Vee-Vee keenly: ‘“l’m absolutely mad about Jerry Macklyn, and I believe, if you’ll stay away long enough, that Jerry will join the ranks of other gentlemen who prefer blond3. “I’ve actually had two dates with hifn, quite against his will, but dates for all that. He swings a wicked hoof, our Jerry!”—and—“The booklets came from the printer’s today. They’re simply stunning, Vee-Vee. ‘The Modern Story of an Ugly Duckling’ is going to be one of the most popular ‘true stories’ ever printed, or I’m the dimwit that Jerry calls me. “We’re not going to send them out to retailers and demonstrators until you get back from your vacation, Jerry says. I scent a mystery, butts I were you I’d be proud to be known as ‘The Peach Bloom Girl’.” Vee-Vee flung the Irritating letters far away from her and opened the paper which had come up with the letters. It was a New York paper, an early edition of'the evening before. The name of Vivian Crandall leaped out of the front page at her, drove the blood from her heart. (To Be Continued) There I* i Nation-wide March on for Virion Crandall. The manager of the hotel get* uneasy and beg* Vee-Ve* to live op her Meret. INDIANA LAW SCHOOL Unlrerdty pf Indlanapolii Three yearr’ course leading to degree of Bachelor of Laws. Graduation qualU.es for admission to State ar.d Federal courts. A lawyer's law school. Fall term opens Sept. 21. For information address DEAN INDIANA LAW SCHOOL 312-322 Colombia Securities Building. 143 East Ohio Street, Indlsnapollp, Ind.

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superintendent, W. B. Sharp; administrative department superintendent, E. B. Bender, and educational superintendent, C. O. Caplinger. Ask Sale of Church COLUMBIA CITY, Ind., Aug. 15 —Sale of the United Brethren Church building here is asked by Eugene and Henry Brunner, Ft. Wayne, seeking to enforce a mechanic’s lien to collect S6OO they allege is due them for services in decorating the building. They assert a life insurance company holds a $20,000 mortgage against the structure and that a Ft. Wayne lumber company has a claim of $5,000.

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