Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 106, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 September 1927 — Page 8
PAGE 8
INDIANA REALTY ! MEN TO HOLD .STATE SESSION i- - City Will Be Host Beginning Wednesday. Attendance of more than 600 Is forecast for the fifth annual convention of the Indiana Realty Association which will convene at Michigan City Wednesday for three Bays, ota of several events sched-. pled in the State for the week beginning Sunday. The Northwestern Indiana Red Cross regional eonference will be field in LaPorte Monday. On *he game day Ripley'County will celebrate its 110th anniversary with a pageant at the Osgood fairgrounds, (.he cast including several hundred persons. x Tuesday will be the opening day of the eighty-ninth annual session of the Eastern Indiana Christian conference ac Hagerstown. Thq meeting will continue through Friday The northeastern Indiana Red Cross regional conference will be held at Ft. Wayne Tuesday. Sheep growers of La Porte County will make a tour Wednesday, which will include a stop at a Shropshire sale in Crawfordsville. United States Senator James E. Watson is expected x> be boomed Eor the presidency at a picnic to be leld Thursday at Falls park, Pendleton, under auspices of the Madison County Republican Club. Watson supporters from the entire Eight congressional district are expected to attend. Fifteen hundred members of Masonic orders are expected to attend a banquet at Huntington Thursday, one of features of the program dedicating the new temple of Huntington Masons. The Studebaker family of South Bend will hold a reunion Thursday celebrating the seventy-fifth anniversary of the Studebaker Corporation.
Brain T,-aser * Answers
Here are the answers to the Brain Teasers questions on page 4: 1. The picture represents King Saul hurling his spear at David. 2. The shortest verse in the Bible is “Jesus wept,” John 9:35. 3. God first was revealed to Moses as a flame in the midst of a bush. 4. It rained for forty days and forty fights during the flood. 5. Jofeeph and Mary lived at Nazareth, in Galilee. 6. The first two books of the New Testament are those of Matthew and Mark. 7. The fatted calf was killed for the prodigal son. 8. Esau traded his inheritance for a mess of pottage. 9. Moses received the Ten Commandments on Mount Sinai. 10. Lepers were obliged to announce their disease by shouting “Unclean.” Boys.- Do Real Work B// Times Special WAVELAND, Ind., Sept. 10.— Boys in vocational classes of Waveland High School are getting practical ideas by completing erection of a work shop, 24x40 feet, as a part of regular class work. A foundation and walls were built during the sumer by journeymen workers. Nov the boys are putting on the roof, laying floors and finishing the interior.
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BEGIN HERE TODAY VERA CAMERON, plain business girl. Is transformed Into a beauty by JERRY MACKLYN, advertising manager for Peach Bloom Cosmetics Company, who is to use her photographs in advertising booklets. She agrees to the transformation only because she la In love with a man who Ignores her, SCHUYLER SMYTHE. Vera spends her vacation at Lake Minnetonka where Smythe Is vacationing. He and other guests mistake her. In spite of her denials, for VIVIAN CRANDALL, ex-prlncess. who after a Paris divorce is In hiding. Learning of the supposed Vivian’s whereabouts, Crandall detectives arrive at night. Vera and Smythe flee In a car. Smythe begs her to marry him at once, but when she tells him the truth about her identity, he Is furious. Vera is kidnaped from the car by two masked men who take her by airplane to a shack in the hills where the prince. IVAN, awaits them. In New York, Jerry, acting on- a mysterious phone call, finds Vivian Crandall hiding In the Bronx. Agreeing to help And Vera, she guides Jerry to the shack which she has cause to remember. They arrive lust as Vera is fleeing, after repulsing the distasteful advances of the prince. She tells them how she was left alone with Ivan after one kidnaper was killed In an alr?lane crash ana the other departed in ear. . , Vivian bribes the prince to go back to Paris. She and Vera become Instant friends and she asks Vera to pose as Princess Vivian a little longer, giving Vivian a chance to finish her three months’ probation, necessary to convince PAUL ALLISON, a poor man whom she loves, that she can live on a modest Income. Vera agrees and they go to Vivian’s apartment where Paul Allison sanctions the arrangement. Vivian writes a letter which Vera is to take to the Crandalls, asking them to accept Vera as their daughter to avoid publicity until she. Vivian, can return home. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY 1 1 "> CHAPTER XLV | “■■"] SLIGHT, quickly stepping I/V figure ascended the steps of Ia house on Park Ave. A young man, who seemed to be patrolling the vicinity of the Crandall home, wheeled at the sound of her brisk footsteps, gave her a long, searching look and then, as she fumbled for her latchkey, broke into a run. “I say! You aren’t Vivian Crandall, are you?” he panted, snatching his straw hat from his head. “I’m Belden, of The Morning—” “Aren’t I?” Vee-Vee smiled demurely, with an upward lift of her enchantingly arched eyebrow, then slipped inside the door and closed it gently but firmly in the astonished face of the reporter. i She opened her handbag to remove the letter with which Vivian Crandall had armed her. After all, they could do nothing worse than refuse to accept Vivians amazing ultimatum, and if they did that, Vivian herself* would stand behind her— She was still reviewing the situation in a panic when a tall, grayhaired old man, very dignified and stately in his butler's clothes, came marching majestically down the softly-lighted hall. Something of Vivian Crandall’s courage and poise came then to the girl who so closely resembled her. Vee-Vee stepped formard almost nonchalantly and greeted the butler with a curt nod. “Good evening Soames,”—Vivian had attended to that detail, too—- “ Are my mother and father in?” The butler’s eyes flew wide in an expression of surprise. His mouth worked soundlessly for a moment, then he bowed. “Good evening, Miss Crandall. I believe they are still in the library, Miss Crandall.” “Perhaps you had better announce that I am calling,” Vee-Vee smiled, her voice a cool and careless as she knew Vivian’s would have been under the circumstances. She followed close upon the heels of the butler to a door far down the impressive hall, but she waited outside until Soames, behind the closed' door, had made his breathtaking announcement. She clenched her hands tightly over the precious letter to strengthen her faltering courage. “Will you come into the library, Miss Crandall?” Soames asked, his face inscrutable again, as he slipped noiselessly through the door. “I’m glad they did not rush to meet me with welcoming arms extended,” Vee-Vee reflected as she forced herself to advance toward certain unpleasq,tness. Her first glance gave her a fairly clear picture of the couple. Vivian’s mother was a tall, handsome \lmost slender woman of 50, with coppercolored hair only a little duller in color than her beautiful daughter’s. Vivian's father was more formidable—a tall, gaunt old eagle, at least fifteen years his wife’s senior. His hair was a bushy mane of white, his eyebrows, in contrast, as black as heavy smudges of ink across his high forehead. Vee-Vee instantly feared Rufus Worrell Crandall and felt drawn toward the. woman who had contributed so generously to Vivian’s beauty and patrician bearing. But she had little time to analyze her emotions, for they were advancing toward her, Mr. Crandall frowning prodigiously, Mrs. Crandall with extended hands and a bright smile of welcome in her hazel eyes and on her fine mouth. “Wait,” Vee-Vee spoke breathlessly. “I don’t want to deceive you for a moment. lam not Vivian:" Perhaps it would be kinder to Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Worrell Crandall, who are, after all, such very important people and so uncompromisingly opposed to publicity of any sort, to draw a kindly curtain over the scene which followed Vera Cameron’s sensational announcement. Fifteen minutes later something remotely resembling calm had Been restored to the rather overpowering beautiful library which an upstart nobody had had the temerity to invade and disturb. Vee-Vee had been permitted to tell her own version of the affair at
the Minnetonka, a version which had previously been discreetly edited by Vivian Crandall, who had insisted upon taking the entire blame for Vee-Vee's unconscious impersonation. After much deliberation on Vivian’s part it had been decided to include the prince and his petty villainy in the story to be told to her parents. As Vivian contended wisely, her father and mother would shudder at the possibility that the true story of that indelicate episode should reach the eyes of an avid public. But the passing of the fifteen minutes found them at a cold and furious deadlock, for all the apparent calm. Mr. Crandall had had the bad Judgment to insult Vee-Vee by offering her a substantial bribe for exact information as to their daughter’s whereabouts and her reasons for her apparently insane conduct. Vee-Vee had countered by walking toward the door in dignified silence, her whole slender body expressing her determination to have nothing more to do with Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Worrell Crandall. Mr. Crandall had been forced to beg her, however, haughtily he did it, to return to the conference as to just what was to be done about Viviah Crandall. Then Soames, the butler, a servant whom the real Vivian had seen but once and who therefore had no suspicion that an imposter had appeared to take her place, appeared in the libary door with the apologetic announcement that reporters —many, many reporters—were clutI tering up the sacred Crandall steps, and that—which was more important—the police were reptesented in that clamorous group in increasing!? formidable numbers. “They say that Miss Crandall was seen to arrive, sir, and I really can not disperse them," Soames concluded apologetically, but firmly. “Tell them all that Miss Crandall has not returned,” Rufus Crandall said sternly, but Mrs. Crandall laid a hand on his arm and looked at him pleadingly. “Please, Rufus, don’t you think we may as well have them in? Vivian has not been in New York for nearly two years,” she added significantly. “Oh, very well Soames, show the gentlemen of the press and the police officers into the library.” When Soames had closed the library door gently upon his apologetic presence, the eagle-faced old man spoke to Vee-Vee in a clipped, stern voice: “You know my daughter well, you say? You know her mannerisms, how she would conduct herself in such a crisis as confronts you?” “I do,” Vee-Vee answered simply. And during the next ten minutes, which were all that Rufu:; Worrell Crandall would allow her to give to the rsporters, she acquitted herself jp the Vivian Crandall manner so expertly that her pseudo parents i had occasion to exchange more than a few startled but satisfied glances. “My daughter,” Rulus Crandall explained crisply, “is safely'at home again, as you can see. She has suffered no serious ill effects from an unpleasant adventure, but she is too tired to give an interview—and will be resting for many days to come. “I have absolutely nothing to say in regard to the nature of that adventure, nor has she. I am entirely satisfied with the manner in which the affair has been concluded. “No ransom was paid. I have no
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
intention of prosecuting or of giving any information that might lead to the arrest and conviction of her abductors. I wish the matter to be dropped by the police and by the press.” And it was upon that stone wall that a score of seasoned reporters butted their frantic heads. The police seemed more content to drop the matter as the mighty Mr. Crandall suggested. To one question, however, VeeVee was allowed to reply. “Is it true, Miss Crandall, that you are engaged to be married to Mr. Schuyler Smythe, with whom you were on friendly terms at the Minnetonka?” “It is not true,” Vee-Vee answered calmly and firmly, her lovely hetid held high. “It is not true then that you and Mr. Smythe were eloping to be married when you were kidnaped?” another reporter insisted. "Certainly it is not true,” VeeVee answered, Just as calmly and proudly. v “Will you and Mrs. Crandall pose to: a news photograph?” another reporter had the temerity to suggest. Rufus Crandall was about to refuse explosively when Mrs. Crandall stepped forward, placing her arm affectionately about her “daughter’s” shoulders. . “Just one pose, gentlemen," she said, with a charming, gracious smile. “My daughter is really very tired and does not look herself at alL’ * Cameras were brought hastily forward and leveled on the touching family group. Rufus Crandall unbent to the point of standing beside Vee-Vee, while Mrs. Crandall, her arm still affectionaely about her shoulders, smiled into the cameras on Vee-Vee’s right. Vee-Vee could not help admiring the gallantry with which they bowed to a will stronger than their own. And she registered a vow, as the cameras clicked to record her proud but gracious smile, to protect the Crandall name, which she had so strangely fallen heir to, with every ounce of wit and courage that she possessed. If the whole incredible plot was exposed, it would not be her fault, here was a very real thrill at the thought that she would, for two whole months, fill the shoes of America’s most beautiful dollar princess. (To Be Continued) Vec-Vee continue* to pley the came, but he begins to worry about Jerry. Read the roxt chapter. BACK AFTER 32 YEARS I. U. Graduate Brings Daughter to Become Co-ed. Bu Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind.. Sept. 10.— Charles Gebauer, graduated from Indiana University here thirty-two years ago, made his first return visit this week to enter his daughter, Mis§ Irene, as a student. A native of Mt. Vernon, Ind., Gebauer is now a wealthy Cleveland, Ohio, manufacturer.
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Death Drama
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(NBA Service. New York Brneau) Killing of three men is laid to Charles M. Bernstein (above) of Baltimore, who became enraged while talking to his lawyer and two others in a New York office. But the casualty list did not stop there. The lawyer, Victor Steinberg, fell or was thrown from a ninth story window after he was shotr—
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and Robert McCrority, theatrical manager, a passerby, suffered a fracture of the spine when Steinberg’s body struck him, as sketched here. McCrority was taken to a hospital, where he soon died. The photograph shows Stfeinberg’s body being removed from the sidewalk.
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RIGHT OF DRY AGENT TOW PHONEJJUGHT Supreme Court Gets Case in Which Nine Seattle Men Were Convicted. BY DEXTER M. KEEZER WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.—Has a Federal dry agent the right to tap your telephone wire if he suspects you of violating the law? The United States Supreme Court just has been asked to answer this question by reviewing a case in which nine men were convicted of dry law violations in Seattle, on evidence obtained by tapping telephone wiresLawyers for the men contend that the convictions should be reversed because telephone wire tapping by Federal dry agents Is a violation of the rights of United States citizens, guaranteed by the Federal Constitution. Conviction Sustained By a vote of two judg* es to one, the convictions were sustained by the Ninth United States Circuit Court of Appeals, which held that telephone wire tapping by Federal dry agents is a legal method of obtaining evidence of dry law violations. One judge, however, took violent exception to such a ruling, and contended that Government wire tapping is an outrage against the liberties guaranteed by the Constitution. The petition for a Supreme Court ruling on the question is based primarily on the dissenting opinion of Judge Frank H. Rudkin of Seatttle, who held that no Federal officer or agent has a right to take messages from a telephone wire to be used as evidence against a suspected person. Judge Assails Action In voicing tuch opinion, Judge Rudkin askjd: “Must millions of people who use the telephone every day for lawful purposes have their messages interrupted and intercepted in this way? Must their personal, private and confidential communications to family, friends and business associates pass through the scrutiny of agents, for the faithful performance of whose duties they have no security, agents whose very names and official stations are in many instances concealed?”
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SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES LEARN Evening Law School _ _ OPEN SEPT. ITH flft IBM for 30th Year. ■ a Iftf Two -year standard I Mln legal course leads to Etaijrn B U LL. B. degree. Cali or write for catalogue. BENJAMIN HARRISON LAW SCHOOL 1151 Consolidated Bldg. RI ley 6881 law school University of Indianapolis Three years’ course leading to degree of Bachelor of Laws. Graduation qualifies for admission to State and Federal courts. A lawyer’s law school. Fall term opens September 21. For information address. DEAN INDIANA LAW SCHOOL. 312-322 Columbia Securities Building, 143 East Ohio Street, IndianapoUs, Ind.
PLAZA PLACE THE LECKNER STUDIOS OPENING MONDAY, SEPT. 12, 1927 Voice—Piano—Public Speaking Correction of Defective Speech Diaphragm Breath Central :09 N. PENN. RILEY 3762
SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES
FRED NEWELL MORRIS Teacher of Singing PRIVATE AND CLASS LESSONS 1808 N. Delaware. Randolph 2595.
1883 1927 The Teachers College of Indianapolis Simon nee# tha opening of the Jackson Kindergarten and Graded School on Monday, September 12th. Modern, well-equipped graded school. Including kindergarten. Teachers of experience. Special attention to the Individun! child. Mlsa Mamie Lott, M. A., Colombia University, director. FOR RATE OF TUITION. CALL RANDOLPH 1904 OFFICE HOURS, 9 UNTIL 4 O’CLOCK ALICE CORBIN BIE9, President.
YOUR STATE UNIVERSITY Offer. DOWNTOWN EVENING CLASSES Accounting Public Speaking Psychology Business English Traffic Languages Business Law Credits Chemistry Sales Management Real Estate Biology Business Organization Property Insurance Short Story Writing Mathematics Journalism Literature " 87 "Classes Begin September 22 A BROAD CULTURAL PROGRAM Teacher Tlßlnlng Three Year Business Certificate Couejes INDIANA UNIVERSITY EXTENSION DIVISION 319 N. PENNSYLVANIA ST. Rl ley 4297
Metropolitan i Affiliated With Butler University CENTRAL BUILDING Pennsylvania and North St si gm w w Phones: Lincoln 8831-835*. \ANAAi north building illalUlfll The North Building is located at the corner of ■ #wamw Pennsylvania and Thirty-fourth streets. This building is reached by the Central Avenue Meridian Heights and the Illinois-Fairground mg 0 street cars. Phone, Washington 1859. nflwmAmAß In thia school the same high standards will be IVB llNkll maintained, the course of study will be the same, and Its students will have the same advantage of recitals, concerts and plays as are offered at the Indianapolis, central school. Indiana this is the faculty— It i with pride wo point to it. Plano Fluta Willard McGregor Arthur Demlng Arthur G. Monnluge* ' clarinet and Saxophone Earle Howe Jones iria Peck Zimmerman tin? Arthur' G. Monnlnger Ftdille School Muslo miiii E Brown Ernest G. Hesser May Aufderheldo Kelmer Elisabeth Kaltz Grace Hutchings Harmony Helen Louie# Quig Arthur G. Monnlnger Degree Frieda Heider ** Essent/el*^* 017 °* Mn * , ° Bachelor of u . Leone Kinder Hietory of Muslo MUSIC H. Ottis Pruitt D™n VVatson J Grace Dorothy Flagg P Offered Frances Anne Wisbard Lorle Kruil * Laura Doertlin Galvin Musics' Form and Analysis Jeanette Gardiner Tu'l E. Brown Florence Keepers Music Appreciation Keltcn Whetttine Grace Hutchings Marie Zorn Ensemble Yolce Adolph H. Schellschmidt Benjamin F. Swarthout Irumen r tatlon nßt Co , un?ernolnl Franklin N. Taylor t Lmu ß ßrow ß n WOenia mTh! sShellachmidt ■ ■■■■ Frieda Heider Polk Dancing and Singing Secretary Mildred Johns Games LoU H. Buaklrk Wlolln Norma Justice „ , Hugh McGlbeny Beading and Dramatis Art fStvjlents Doun Watson Frances Beils (sabeUe Mos.man Henry Marshall §££ Thomas Poerlanl Gladys Smead Georgia Bauman Norma Justice Viola Play Analysis Dodd Watson Frances Beik Violoncello \ Public Speaking Adolph H. Schellschmidt Frances Beik ■ Cornet and Trumpet Classlo Dancing Directors: Leslie Eugene Peck Madame Gato rtfi.'iLe FaU T e™ Begins Monday, Sept. 12 Hugh McGibeny Year Book Free on Application Leslie E. Peck BALDWIN AND ELLINGTON PIANOB USED
The college season opens for recitations in the Department of Liberal Arts at BUTLER SEPTEMBER 22 For detailed information address the President, Indianapolis, Indiana Subjects suggested by the various couses offered:
Dietetics Domestic Science Drawing Drama Economics Editing Education Electricity Embryology Engineering Physics English Entomology Expression Football Foreign Trade French Geology German Government Greek Hebrew Heredity History Home Economic* Homilectics Illustration Insurance Italian Journalism Kindergarten (Teachers College and Claire Ann Shover Nursery School) Labor Problems Latin Law (Prelaw and Indiana Law School)
Accounting Acting Advertising Aesthetics Anatomy Anthropology Arabic Archaeology Argumentation and Debating Art (Herron Art Institute) Astronomy < Athletics ("Potsy” Clark Director) Band Music (J. B. Vandaworker, Director) Banking Baseball —Basketball Bible Biology and Botany Business Administration Calisthenics Chemistry Child Psychology Chorus Christianity Coaching Commerce Composition Cooking Contemporary Literature Contemporary Society Design
Butler University jnd Affiliated Schools
Etntler College (Liberal Arte) Butler College of Religion Butler School of Jonrnaliem Teachers College of Indianapolis
Downtown Extension Classes in Many Subjects Available . Follow the progress of the NEW BUTLER, now under construction at Fair view, and yon will note the cultural advance of all Indianapolis,
SEPT. 10, 1927
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Literature Logic Marketing Mathematics Mechanical Drawing Mental Tests and Measurements Missions Music, ail branches (see affiliated schools) Nutrition Ornithology Pageantry Philosophy Physical Education Physics Physiology Playwriting, etc. Political Science Premedics Psychology Public Speaking Race Problems Radio Religions Education Salesmanship Sculpture v Semitics Sewing Sociology Spanish Teaching Textiles Theology Traffic and Transportation Zoology
Herron Art Institute Ind. Col. of Music and Fins Arta Indiana Law School Metropolitan School of Music Claire Ann Shover Nursery School
