Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 83, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 August 1927 — Page 12

PAGE 12

EXPANSION OF INDUSTRY NOTED IN BONDJSSUES Securities Make Huge Gain in 1927, Business Survey SJiows. By United Prest WASHINGTON, Aug. 16.—The industrial expansion of the United ( States is Indicated in a survey today by the Federal reserve board showing that total security issues during the first half of the year were larger than in any other half year since the period of war financing. Including both new and refunding issues, these amounted to a total of $5,300,000,000, or $1,350,000,000 more than during the first half of 1926. Larger Refunding Issues The refunding issues, amounting to $1,200,000,000, were twice as large as last year or the year before, and generally bore a* lower rate of interest than the securities they replaced. During the last four fiscal years new issues have totaled $24,000,000 - 000, of which $4,000,000,000 was for foreign securities. Corporate issues during this period totaled $15,756,000,000. * "About one-half of these corporate issues represent capital requirements of public .utilities of various kinds,'* the reserve board explained, "railroads, street railways, electric light and power, telephone and telegraph, water and gas companies. Reflect Demand for Capital "Other corporate issues represent a part of the demand for housing accommodation, and non-corporate' issues represent a part of the demand for housing accommodation, and non-corporate issues reflect the demand for capital arising from construction of public roads and public buildings. “Thus the demand during the recent years for capital to be used in long-term investment has originated largely in a demand for durable instruments of production and durable consumption goods as is usual during periods of large industrial activity.”

FORMER INSTRUCTOR AT DE PAUW IS DEAD Park B. Graham, Funeral to Be Held Today at Greencastle. Funeral services for Park B. Graham, 76, of 2335 Broadway, who died Monday, will be held at 2:30 p. m. at Greencastle with the Rev.'Victor L. Raphael officiating. Mr. Graham was formerly instruictor of comet in De Pauw University music department and for many years was leader of the Greencastle band. The greater part of his life was spent in Greencastle. Surviving relatives include two sons, Harry D, Graham of Indianapolis and Rodney B. Graham of Charlotte, N. C.; a daughter, Mrs. Edwin A. Hunt of Indianapolis; a brother, Charles S. Graham of Indianapolis, and two sisters, Mrs. Emma D. Crunk of Los Angeles, Cm., and Mrs. Betty Dicks of Greencastle. The body lay in State at the Blackwell funeral home, 926 N. Capitol Ave., this afternoon. Mother of 7 Kills Self By Times Special OWENBVILLE, Ind., Aug. 16. Mrs. William A. Barnett, 65, mother of seven children,-is dead at her home today, a suicide by poisoning. Cause for the suicide has not been determined.

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BEGIN HEBE TODAY JERRY MACKLYN, advertising -manager for Peach Bloom Cosmetics, /gets the consent of VERA CAMERON, his sec-'-retary, to transform her into a beauty. She agrees only after seeing and falling In love with a stranger. He asks the beauty specialist to use as a model the portrait of a beautiful girl he supposes to be a movie actress. Vera wants to go to Lake Minnetonka on her vacation, to meet the man she loves. His name Is SCHUYLER BMYTHE. He and other guests mistake her for VIVL\N CRANDALL, heiress and ex-prlncess. Her attempts to convince the guests of their mistake are unsuccessful. Smythe falls in love with her, and denies the rumors he Is engaged to NAN FOSDICK. Vera finds it difficult to declare her real Identity to Smythe, especially since it Is apparent he is in love with the girl he thinks she is. NOW GO ON WITH THE STOBY CHAPTER XXIII _ • [771 ° closely dicf Vee-Vee feel her■S self identified with a girl she 1.. 1 had never seen, of whom she had scarcely heard until three days before, that it seemed that sh. was reading about herself as her eyes took in the big headlines: "''N “DETECTIVES SEEK MISSING CRANDALL HEIRESS.” In the center of the front page was a picture of Vivian Crandall, with the caption: “Vivian Crandall, until three weeks ago the Princess Vivian, wife of Prince Ivan Polaski, of Russia’s repudiated royalty, is the object of a nationwide search by private according to information received from friends in the confidence of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Worrell Crandall, multi-millionaire society leaders of New York and Newport.” The column of front-page type gave little more actual information than the caption under the portrait. The picture might have been a photograph of herself, Vee-Vee noted with fresh wonder. It showed the Princess Vivian in decollete evening dress, with three strands of pearls *about her proud neck, a jewel-studded coronet on her bobbed head. s One paragraph of the small type declared: “Prince Ivan, the husband whom the Princess Vivlkn divorced in Paris, is ir. New York, registered at the Plaza Hotel. The Prince declares that the heiress divorced him without his knowledge and that he has come to New York to find his former wife and to plead for a reconciliation and remarriage. “He scouts the idea of foul play in connection with the Princess’ disappearance, and is convinced that she will reveal her whereabouts in her own good time. He also scoffs at the rumor that the former Princess is in hiding with a lover whom she intends to marry as soon as convention will permit. He declares that he has the highest possible opinion of his former wife’s honor.” “Trying to court her through the papers,” Vee-Vee decided scornfully. “It’s a pity he didn’t have more concern for his own honor. She might not have divorced him if he had.” Detectives scouring the counrty for a harried woman who asked nothing but solitude. Then fear for her own self pushed aside her righteous indignation for Vivian Crandall. At any moment now the detectives might get on the scent of the girl at the Minnetonka whom all the guests, and even the management, believed to be Vivian Crandall.

She jumped out of bed, ran to her desk and began to write with furious haste a telegram to Jerry Macklyn. But before she had finished her frantic appeal for him to come and stand by her in the threatened disaster, she stopped and clenched he. cold hands against her pounding heart. Why wire him at all? Why not simply pack up an<* leave? Terror sent her hands flving through the desk drawers, searching for a schedule of trains to New York. There was no train until the 11:52 p. m., the train which Mrs. Bannister and Nan Fosdick had taken last night. She felt trapped; then came the slow, insinuating thought that she was glad she could not get away until nearly midnight. She would have, would be forced to have, one more previous day with Schuyler Smythe. She would pack, would be ready to leave on the midnight train, but the day at least was hers—and Schuyler’s. She was taking dresses off their hangers to put them into her wardrobe trunks when the telephone rang. “Is that you, Vee-Vee?' Your voice sounds so odd, darling,” Schuyler Smythe’s warm, deep voice came caressingly over the wire. \ “i—i don’t feel very well. Oh, it’s nothing. I’m just tired, I suppose,” Vee-Vee answered, relaxing weajtly against the heaped-up pillows orber bed. “I’ve been waiting for you,” his voice came reproachfully. "Have you forgetton that you were to play golf with me this morning?” She had deferred playing golf as long as possible, conscious that her game was extremely amateurish, undoubtedly miles below the practiced performance of Vivian Crandall. When she had made the engagement she had not intended to keep it, had intended to suggest some other form of diversion at the last minute. But now she took the plunge desperately. She might as well let her golf betray her as anyi thing else. "I’ll be dressed and down In ten minutes, Sdhuyler. Awfully sorry to have kept you waiting,” she told him. She was about to leave the room, her heart beating quickly at the thought she would see Schuyler Smythe in just two more minutes, when a knock sounded upon the door, a discreet, deferential knock. She thought it was the waiter, come to remove her breakfast tray and table, called, “Come in!” blithely. But it was not the waiter. It was the hotel manager. Mr. Thurston, his bald forehead glistening with the dew of embarrossmentt, his big white hands massaging themselves nervously. “Miss—er—Cameron, I beg you to pardon this intrusion,” he began deprecatingly, “but I felt it my duty to—er—your parents as well as yourself to speak to you.” “I haven’t the least idea what

you mean,” Vee-Vee said, raising her chin arrogantly. “You have seen yesterday’s paper, haven’t you, MiSs—Cameron?” Thurston asked with more spirit. “I have seen it, yes,” Vee-Vee admitted. “But I still fail to understand—” “I don’t want any scandal, Miss Cameron,” the man went on doggedly. "I—we all appreciate the honor of having you at the Minnetonka, and I hope yougwill stay all summer. “But I—l very much appreciate it, Miss—Cameron, if you would notify your parents that you are here, so that there will be no possible reason for them to blame the management for not having notified them of your presence here. I—l feel the responsibility-very keenly, Miss Crandall—” “My name is Miss Cameron,” VeeVee interrupted, her voice even and firm. “I told you when I first came that I would trust you to correct any misapprehension that might arise as to my identity.” One lobe of her brain, listening critically, told her that she was talking like her old self, like the Vera Victoria Cameron she had been before her transformation. “I know/ Miss Cameron,” the manager hastened to assure her. “And I should have been very glad to assist you in your effprt to remain here incognito. “But with detectives looking for you, likely to pounce upon yby at the hotel any minutes and cause a scandal—” He hesitated unhappily. “I assure you, Mr. Thurston, that no detectives are looking for Vera Victoria Cameron, that I ,am Vera Victoria Cameron, and that you should feel no uneasiness whatever on my account.” But as she said the last words, color flooded her pale face. She knew she was lying, that the poorr distracted manager had far more to fear because she was Vera Victoria Cameron than if she were the Vivian Crandall that he took her to be. “Os course, Miss Crandall—l beg your pardon, Miss Cameron —if you take that attitude there is nothing more that I can say,” Thurston told her dejectedly, mopping his glistening bald head with a fresh white handkerchief. “But I do hope that in case anything—anything at all, Miss Cameron—comes up, of an unpleasant character, I mean, that you will abj solve the management of the Minnetonka from dll blame.” “The only thing that you could possibly be blamed for is for not believing me,” Vee-Vee told him severely. “I shall be glad to leave the hotel, Mr. Thurston, if that would relieve your mind.” “Oh, by no means!” the unhappy man protested. “As I have told you, we are honored to have you here. I hope you are comfortable?” He was the solicitous hotel manager again. “Quite comfortable,” Vee-Vee assured him briskly. She wfts thinking that if she obeyed her impulse to flee from'the Minnetonka that night she would be tacitly confessing to Thurston that she was Vivian Crandall, and that he would have every right to notify the Crandall family to watch for her at the Grand Central Station. Her detention in the station would inevitably result in her being hauled before the Crandalls for identification. Their discovery of her resemblance to their daughter—a resemblance that no one would believe had been achieved accidentally, since haircut, shaping of eyebrows and coloring of hair could not have

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

been affected without deliberate design—would Just as inevitably brand her as an impostor. She might even be arrested for fraud, would undoubtedly find herself smeared all over the front pages. She was trapped, horribly trapped, whether she left the hotel or stayed. When Thurston had left, looking very unhappy, Vee-Vee again flew to her desk, to complete her telegram to Jerry Macklyn. But again, before she had flhished it, she halted, her pencil stabbing viciously at the yellow sheet. “No, I’m not . going to get him into a mess. I won’t let him take the blame. It might cost him his position with Peach And again, irrationally, "while tears gathered in her vivid green eyes, she muhnured, "Dear Jerry!” But there were no tears in her eyes when she held out her hand to Schuyler Smythe. She was asparkle with eagerness and excitement, determined to make the most of the preeious hours that were left to her before the storm broke. For she was sure there would be a sterm, and thdt she would have to fafe it alone, unless—Her vivid eyes probed the glowing brown eyes of Schuyler Smythe as if she had never looked deep into them before. (To Be Continued) Mr*. Fondick hu something Interest* ,*• ‘ell Vee-Vee about Schuyler Smythe. Read the next chapter.

Brain Teaser Answers

Below are answers to the Brain Teaser questions on page 4: 1. The three main divisions of foods are fate, proteids and carbohydrates. 2. Sugars and starches are carbohydrates. 3. Nitrogen is found In proteids, but not in fats or carbohydrates. 4. Meat contains proteid and fat 5. Vegetables contain carbohydrate and proteids. 6. Vitamin A, fat soluble, Is found in butter, eggg, etc.; vitamin B is found in yeast, greeen leaves and milk; vitamin C is found in fresh fruits. 7. Lack of vitamin A checks growth. Vitamin B aids in the digestion and assimilation of food. Lack of vitamin C causes .gcurvy. 8. There are 5,280 feet in a mile. 9. The horns of <leer are called antlers. 10. The Intermediate between the deer and the goat is thr antelope.

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HEARSE PARTS AID MAKER OF GRAINjDOMBINE R. K. Jarrell of Frankfort Has Unique Machine at Work.' By Times Speclat FRANKFORT, Ind., Aug. % 16. Using the chassis of an old motor hearse, and the engine from the same vehicle, R. K. Jarrell has assembled a combine—harvesting and threshing machine in one—which is in successful operation in a wheat field on his farm near here. Aside from the separator unit, the machine was designed and built under Jarrell’s supervision by a local foundry. It operates on a different principle from the regular combine—the cutting apparatus being front. Manufacturers of combines have had representatives here looking. over the home-made machine. Jerrell says his machine has an advantage over other types in that there is no loss at the 6tart of cutting a field of grain, the front cutting design permitting a clean sweep from the first, not possible with a side cutting apparatus. Factory Doubles Size s ßy Times Special ELKHART, Ind., Aug. 16.—The Marshall Electric Company, manufacturing automotive testing and battery charging equipment and accessories, is increasing the floor space of its plant from 5,000 to 10,000 square feet, due to increasing business and desire to add more lines to production.

EVERITT’S m Chick Feed SPECIAL! fYji 30 Lbs. Srralrh. 30 I J&fljfZag lha. Laying Mash, 1 l 1 fld/Ia lb. Panacea Poultry jKjRV Tonic, Delivered. Cos | AMtajL ' All lor <5 L 1 Offer good till Aug. 20 EVERITT’S SEED STORES 5 N\ Ala. St. 227 W. Wash. St. Lincoln 4905 Main 4740

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AVtATRIX KILLED IN WHIRLING PROPELLOR Stunt Flying Actress Steps Into Blade After Photograph. By United Press YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, Aug. 16. Miss Gladys Roy, 27, stunt flying motion picture actress, died late yesterday from injuries sustained when she walked into the whirling propeller of an airplane. Miss Roy was posing with “Miss Ohio” (Evelyn Wilgus) for a picture. She insisted on having the propeller running so the blades would not appeaa in the photograph. The picture was snapped and the aviat/ix, forgetting the whirling blades, stepped out of the pilot’s seat into them. Schumann-Heink At Lake By TimcM Special LAKE, Ind., Aug. 16. Mme. Ernestine Schumann-Heink, “the grand old woman of grand ■ opera,” will sing here tonight. Sixty years old, she says, “I feel as young as Lindburg. I can’t seem to feel old. I’m still a war horse and I’ll be one to the end.” Marion Man, 81, Dies By Times Special MARION, Ind., Aug. 16.—Martin Hanmore, 81, who with his wile recently celebrated the sixtieth anniversary of their marriage, is dead, a victim of heart disease. His body was found in bed by Mrs. Hanmore.

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