Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 209, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 January 1928 — Page 12
PAGE 12
WOMAN DRIVER, BLINDED IN RAIN, STRIKESWALKER Victim Painfully Injured; Two Girls Are Hurt in Crossing Crash. Mrs. Lizzie Sibert, 49, of 1415 E. Nineteenth St., was painfully injured Sunday when she was struck by an automobile driven by Mrs. Earl Stone, 26, of 1028 Ralston Ave., at Seventeenth St. and Roosevelt Ave. Mrs. Stone said she was blinded by the rain and did not see Mrs. Sibert. Mrs. Sibert suffered a severe head Injury and body bruises. Miss Delores Adair, 20, of 1435 E. Vermont St., and her sister, Wanetta Adair, 19, were treated at city hospital for injuries suffered early today when an automobile was struck by a packing southbound Monon Railroad locomotive at the E. New York St. crossing. The girls were riding with Russell Kyger, 18, of 1166 W. Thirty-Fifth St., and Robert Norris, 25, of 1214 .W. Thirty-Fourth St. The automobile was carried more than 100 feet south of the crossing. Martin Rodgers, 50, of 414 Dorman St., watchman, told police that he saw the automobile approaching and waved his lantern. Mrs. Nora Ritchey, 49, of 1425 Prospect St., was injured when she stepped off a moving traction car on Prospect St. near Olive St. She told police she wanted to get off at Spruce St., but the car did not stop. She was taken to city hospital. John Harrison, 1848 Gent Ave., Was. arrested on charges of drunken driving and blind tiger after he had attempted to drive away a damaged automobile from the scene of an accident at Tenth St. and Pershing Ave. A woman crashed her automobile Into the parked car of John Branaugh, 1115 N. Belmont St., and left after the accident. While police were investigating, Harrison got into the car and began to drive away. Former Official Dies TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Jan. 9. Funeral services will be held Tuesday for Charles S. Batt, former State Senator and a Vigo County Democratic leader, who died Sunday after a long ilness of heart disease. He had served as city Judge here and as county attorney.
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BEGIN HEBE TODAY When Diana Farweil’s mother overhears talk ot love between her daughter and a schoolboy friend, she It fearful that Diana will go wrong, like her sitter, Vivian, who ran away from home four years before. So the mother hastens a marriage of Diana with Arthur Vance, some years older, a successful San Francisco lawyer. Diana is only 18 and goes Into marriage believing "Arthur Is so different from other men he always will be satisfied with merely spiritual love.” He respects her reserve, as a young girl’s natural shyness. at first. But, after months ot loveless wedded Use, he tells her she has wrecked his Use because of her continued Insistence upon what he calls “this unnatural relationship.” Some time after her mother dies, Diana leaves Arthur and finds her long-lost sister, Vivian, preparing for a trip to New York. Diana rents a room at the home of Mrs. Burton, widowed friend of Diana's mother, and enrolls in Seton’s School of Acting. .. , , „ After a month she receive* a letter from Arthur, begging her to return. She Is desperately lonely, but writes him that she will never go back until she can be the kind of a wife he wante her to be. Within a few month* she has prof’ressed so well with her work that she s taken by Shepherd Seton, head of the school, as his personal pupil., In a few weeks he has aroused In her. In the impassioned love scenes they rehearse together, sensations she has never had belore. Diana fall* passionately In love with
LIST NIGHT CLASSES I. U. University Extension Courses to Begin Feb. 6. New catalogs listing eighty-one late afternoon and evening classes of the Indiana University Extension Division to begin here Feb. 6, are now ready for distribution. Among the courses offered for the first time are casualty insurance, life insurance, real estate appraisals, retail merchandising, qualitative analysis, business finance, special accounting studies and vocational psychology. The usual business courses in accounting, business law, public speaking, psychology, sales management and business English will be given one evening a week. New courses in liberal and cultural subjects include popular courses on the life of the Romans; an advanced course in Ovid; short story writing; community civics; elementary and advanced courses in mental hygiene, birds and general zoology. There will be eighteen courses in English, with new work in debate, a course in Greek tragedy and drama. Five courses in French, includes French drama and a German course including the classics. There will also be an elementary Spanish course. Yon can always obtain bargains in household goods if you shop and buy through Times want ads. A CLEAR COMPLEXION Buddy cheeks—sparkling eyes—most women can have. Dr. F. M. Edwards for 20 year* treated scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave his patients a substitute for calomel made of a few wellknown vegetable ingredients mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets. Know them by their ollvo color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a normal action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter in one's system. If you have a pale face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, headaches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts. Inactive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets nightly for a time and note the pleasing results. Thousands of women and men take Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—now and then to keep fit. 15c, 30c and 60c.—Advertisement.
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Setcin and decides to aks Arthur for a divorce. Arthur flatly refused to divorce her. When she returns to the studio, Seton tells her his wife has gone east tor six That night Seton did not call and when Diana phoned to tell him goodnight, he was obviously annoyed. Next day Seton’s explalnation that he feared his servants might be evesdropplng Infuriates Diana and she cannot go on with her lesson. Twenty-four hours later she has recovered her poise and Seton's friendliness makes her forget her humiliation over the phone call. Seton and Diana visit a roadhouse together. Diana decides to ask Arthur for a divorce. Diana comes Into Seton's office to find him making love to his own wife. Diana and Seton call off their friend- * sihe leaves Seton to enter Klasalek’s class when someone rushes in with the information Seton has been shot. Vivian later confesses to Diana that she shot Seton. Her former husband comforts her and later she calls on Seton to find him nearly recovered. Vivian runs away leaving a note telling Diana they probably will never see eacn other again. Diana takes luncheon with Arthur and forgets they had agreed to see an attorney about a divorce that afternoon. They part and Arthur asks Diana’s permission to call that evening. While Diana. In a romantic frame of mind waited for Arthur to arrive he phones and gives a business appoint-
WRITE OF REAL ESTATE Six City Members Are Contributors to 6-Volume Library. Six Indianapolis business men, three bankers and three realtors, are contributors to a six-volume real estate library, recently published by the National Association of Real Estate Boards. Local contributors are George C. Forrey, president Fletcher American Company; William B. Schiltges, Fletcher Savings and Trust Company; Albert E. Metzger, vice president Fletcher Savings and Trust Company; B. C. Cartmell, Cartmell-Burcaw-Moore, Inc.; Oliver H. Clark, McCullough Agency, and George W. Klein, Klein and Kuth, Inc. Suffers From Cat’s Bite Bii Time* Special BICKNELL, Ind., Jan. 9.—Malcolm Hash, 11, is suffering from an abscess in his left arm which developed from a wound on a finger of his left hand where he was bitten by a cat nearly a month ago.
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THE INDLANAPOLIb TIMES
HURST’ L \ Author of “THE SNOB” J (Copyright, 1927, By Bell Syndicate, Inc.)
ment as the reason for hts Inability to keep their appointment. Diana suspects an affair with the woman he had spoken to that noon in the restaurant. Arthur phones Diana to ask her to accompany Parker, an attorney, and himself to lunch so they can discuss their llvorce with him. No mention ot their divorce Is made at the luncheon. Arthur objects to Diana’s mixing marriage and a career and a reconciliation Is avoided because Diana refuses to give up her career. NOW QO ON WITH THE STOBY CHAPTER LXV After Arthur had left, Diana sat motionless for a long time, stunned. She reconstructed in her mind her recent conversation with Arthur that had ended so disastrously and thought of a hundred and one ways in which the unhappy ending could have been avoided. If Arthur and she were not two such headstrong fools! She told herself that Arthur had reacted to her proposal to continue her stage work while living with him in precisely the manner in which she should have expected. Arthur had certainly made it clear before their marriage that he would have not the slightest sympathy for her artistic ambition. At any rate, he had not deceived her on this score, she was forced to admit. At heart he was an old-fashioned husband. Intensely sentimental about the financial dependence of his wife. He regarded it as a trait to be proud of. Looking at it more sanely, Diana was forced to admit to herself that she had no right to ask him to sacrifice this ideal. What she was asking him Was contrary to every basic law of his nature. There would be no thrills for Arthur in the plaudits of audiences for Diana Dore. He really thought “this acting business” was Just a silly little game. He had absolutely no conception of the tremendous effort and real ability it took to become an actress. Like the majority of those who sit on the darkened side of the foot-
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lights, it seemed to him merely an easy, “butterfly” sort of way to make a living. Right enough, perhaps, for those who had nothing more important to do, but not consequential enough to boast of. Bitting in her lonely apartment, Diana felt a touch of the old nostalgia for her own things coming over her. She was intensely susceptible to her surroundings. Everything she had touched no matter how promising it might have been at the start had a habit of turning to dry dust for her . . . She was tired of pretending. Weary of simulating happiness. Sick of running the gamut of happy emotions on the stage. And yet the stage was her life—more than ever now since Arthur had left. She was convinced he would never return. At least, not with any desire in his heart to have her back. She had hurt him too deeply, had shown too little understanding of him, she knew. Diana missed the p.ttia , 'tive apartment she had shared ~th Nadine. But she could hope for nothing
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better than the one she was In. At least, for the present. If she were a real artist, of course, she would have been willing to starve in a garret. But was she? She loved her profession—she was sure of thatr-but not so blindly that she would have been willing to undergo real suffering for it. The thought of living with Arthur, loved and protected while she went on with her work had seemed delightful. Well, he didn’t love her! Nobody did! She might as well give up the idea of a satisfactory romance with any man. They were too selfish. And she had been considered a huntress! But she was through. Her mother had been right; Mrs. Burton was right; Vivian was right. Check the men! Almost overcome by the grayness of her unloved future, Diana crept, shivering into bed... (To Be Continued)
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