Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 286, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 March 1928 — Page 14
PAGE 14
POLITICS TAKES CHIEF INTEREST IN BOTHHOUSES Legislation in Throes of Campaign Talk Is Left Unheeded. BY C. J. LILLET F,y United Press WASHINGTON, March 27.—Politics and not legislation is interesting Congress in the closing weeks of this session. More and more law-making is being set aside to prepare the stage for the national conventions in June and the presidential campaign this summer and fall. The Democrats have the bit in their teeth, and, influenced by the new Teapot Dome revelations, see their best chance for victory. Major problems confronting the Nation are being sidetracked in the conflict for supremacy between the two major parties. Flood Control Action Overdue The Senate should have reached flood control the first of this week, but too much politics has been injected into its proceedings. The six working days of last week were devoted more to campaign issues than to the radio conference report and the migratory bird bill. Senator Robinson of Indiana set off the fuse by trying to link Governor A1 Smith with Harry Sinclair’s oily path through the political firmament. Tire migratory bird bill, which was scheduled to be out of the way early in the week, is still to be voted upon. It will be rejected, according to the general belief at the capitol, but just when depends upon how soon the Senators stop to draw their breaths in the two-ring political circus that is being put on for the edification of the galleries and the country at large. Expect Disposal After April After the Bird bill comes flood control. The Jones bill will pass the Senate as most contentions have been ironed out in executive sessions of the Commerce Committee, during which numerous amendments have been attached. Unless campaign propaganda takes up to# much time, the Senate ought to dispose of the Jones bill by the middii $f April. When the House will up flood control and for how long, hasn’t been determined. Flood legislation will have to go to conference and then go back to each branch for consideration a second time. With the session’s close only two months away, hopes for final adoption are not any too bright. Revamping Norris Bill Muscle Shoals is held up in the House Military Affairs Committee, where a sub-committee of five is trying to revamp the Norris bill to fit in with all the conflicting views there. Even when reported to the House a Muscle Shoals bill will have difficulty getting on the calendar. Many Congressmen privately are saying that Muscle Shoals has lost out at this session. Passage of any legislation, except the unfinished appropriation bills and a deficiency measure yet to come out of the House Appropriations Committee, is doubtful. But there is no doubt about the campaign propaganda. Plenty of the latter is in sight, as the country will discover only too quickly. Parent-Teacher Course By Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., March 27. —Parent-teacher workers from various parts of the State are attending a short course at Indiana University which opened Monday and will continue through Thursday. Most of the instruction is under direction of Mrs. Homer J. Miller, South Bend, Indiana Parent-Teach-er Association president. Blackheads Go Quick By This Simple Method This Is a simple method that makes i blackheads go as if by magic. Get two ; ounces of Calonite powder from your drug store, sprinkle a little on a hot, wet cloth, rub briskly over the affected parts, and in two minutes, you will find every blaokhead dissolved away entirely.—Advertisement.
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THIS HAS HAPPENED The summer she is 16, SALLY FORD leaves the State orphanage to be “farmed out” to CLEM CARSON, a farmer. Sail? knows no other home than the orphanage from the time she is 4. when a woman leaves here there anil disappears. She forgets her cares when she meets DAVID NASH, handsome young student of scientific farming who 1s working on the Carson farm for the summer. David is genuinely fond of Sally, arousing the anger of both PEARL. Clem's daughter, and of Clem himself, who hopes David and Pearl will marry. David begs the little orphan to eonfide in him if life on the farm becomes unbearable and assures her he is her friend. She goes with him for a walk in the field by moonlight and confides in him that she fears Carson will soon take her back to the Home because ot Peart’s hatred for her. ft) The next day Sally is left atone at the farm with Clem. David disappears and she is terrified because she believes that Clem will try to take her back to the orphanage while his wife, who likes Sally, is away. Sally bundles a few things together and hides them, for she knows she will run away before she will return to the orphans' home. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. CHAPTER XI AS the afternoon wore on, and still Carson did not appear, Sally’s gratitude for Mi's. Carson’s inarticulate kindness sent her on a flying trip to the orchard to gather enough hard, sour apples to make pies for supper. Carson, she began to hope, was so busy setting up the cider mill that he would have no time to take her back to the orphanage, even if he wanted to. Maybe she was safe for a while; she would not run away just yet, for if she ran away she would never see David agatn— It was fun to have the whole big kitchen to herself. Humming under her breath, she cut chilled lard into well-sifted flour, using the full amount that Mrs. Carson’s pie crust called for. At the orphanage the pie crust was tough and leathery, because the matron would not permit the cook to use enough lard. What joy it was to cook on a prosperous farm, where there was an abundance of every good thing to eat! If only she could stay the whole summer through! She could stand the hard work. . . As she piled the sliced apples thickly into the crimped pie crust, she thought wistfully of Mrs. Carson, who was kind to her although she was a hard taskmistress. “Maybe,” Sally reflected sadly, dusting ground nutmeg over the thickly sugared apples, “if I could stay on here, Mrs. Carson would want to adopt me. But of course Pearl and Mr. Carson wouldn't let her. They hate me because David likes me and won’t marry Pearl. And I like David better than anybody in the world,” she confessed to herself, as the pink in her cheeks deepened. “But I would love to have a mother, even if it was only a ready-made mother. I wonder why some girls have everything, and others nothing? Why should Pearl have a mother who just spoils her past all enduring? Pearl isn’t good —she isn't even good to her mother.” When her three big apple pies were in the oven, she washed the bread bowl in which she had mixed her pie crust; washed and dried vigorously the big yellow pine board ’ and rolling pin, and restored them to their proper places. Then, feeling very useful and virtuous, she set the table for supper, singing little scraps' of popular songs which she had heard over the radio during her week on the farm. By that time her pics were baked to a deep, golden brown, with little glazed blisters across their top crusts. “If I do say it myself,” she said, in her little old-woman way, her head cocked sideways as she surveyed her handiwork, “those are real pies. I hope flitrs. Carson will be surprised and pleased.” Then, because she was very tired and the late afternoon sun was making an inferno of the kitchen, Sally climbed the steep back stairs to the garret, intending to take a cooling sponge bath and a short nap before the family returned, hungry for supper. She was about to pass David’s door when his voice halted her:
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“That you, Sally? I’ve been enjoying your singing, even if I did spend more time listening than studying.” ' She went involuntarily toward him. “I didn’t know you were up here, David,” she told him. “I’m sorry I interrupted your studying. I wouldn't have sung if I’d known you were up here.” The boy was seated at a small pine table, covered with books and papers, but as she advanced hesitatingly into the room he rose. “Come on in,” he invited hospitably. “Wouldn’t you like to see my books? Some of them are fascinating—full of pictures of prize stock and model chicken farms and champion egglaying hens and things like that. Look,” he commanded, snatching up a book as if eager to detain her. “Here’s a picture of a cow that my grandfather owns. She holds the State record for butter-fat production. Her name’s Beauty Bess—look!” Sally, without a thought as to the impropriety of being in a man's bedroom, slipped into the chair he was holding for her and bent her little braid-crowned head gravely over her book. “I'm going to stock the farm with nothing but pedigred animals when it’s mine,” David told her, enthusiastically. “Look, here's the kind—” And he bent low over her, |so that his arm was about her shoulder as he riffled the pages of the book, seeking the picture he wanted her to see. A sudden gust of wind, presaging a summer shower, slammed the door shut, but the two were so absorbed that they did not hear the faint click of the lock. Nor did they hear, a little later, the sound of the stealthy, futile turning of the knob, the retreat of carefully muted footsteps. David was bending low over Sally, his cheek almost touching hers, excitedly expounding the merits of crop rotation, and pointing out textbook confirmation of his theories, when sudden, evil words shocked tbeir attention from the fascinations of the agricultural textbook: “Caught you at last! Thought you was mighty slick, didn’t you? —locking the door! I’ve a good mind to whip you every step of the way back to the orphan asylum, you lying, nasty little—” Carson's voive, hoarse with anger and exultation over his coming revenge upon the girl who had dared to jeopardize his daughter’s happiness, stopped with a gasp upon the evil word he had spat out, for his shoulders, as he tried to wriggle into the room from the small window, were stuck in the too-narrow frame. If the wind had not been roaring about the house, banging branches of shade trees against the sliping j roof upon which David’s window; looked, they would necessarily have ■ heard his approach, but as it was they were totally unprepared for the sight of his head *,nd and breast, framed in the window, his glittering black eyes fixed upon them with evil exultation. Sally struggled to her feet ns David leaped toward the window. She had a fleeting glimpse of his rage-distorted young face, his lips snarled back from his teeth. “David! Don’t David!” she cried, her voice a high, thin wail of terror —terror for David, not for Carson. “You’re not fit to live, Carson!” David's young voice broke in its rage, but there was no faltering in the power behind the blow which crashed into the farmer’s face. Sally, sinking to her knees in her
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terror, heard the rending sound of flimsy timber giving way, then the more awful noise of a big body sliding rapidly down the room. She half fainted then, so that when David tried to lift her to her feet she swayed dizzily against him, her eyes dazed, her ashen lips hanging slackly. “Can you hear me, Sally?” Davids voice, a little tremulous with awe at that which he had done, came like a series of loud claps in her ears. She clung to him weakly, her eyes glancing- fearfully from the window to his set, pale young face. Then she nodded slowly, like a child awakening fro ma nightmare. “I thing I've killed him, Sally. He hasn’t made a sound since he crashed to the ground.” David's hazel eyes were as wide as hers, and almost as frightened. “You did—that—for me?” Sally whispered. “Oh, David, what are we going to do?” She began to cry then, in little, frightened whimpers, but her blue eyes, swimming sin tears, never left his face. The boy squared his shoulders as if to prepare them for a great burden, and in that instant he seemed to grow older. Color eame j slowly baek to his bronzed checks, but ills lips shook a little as lie ' answered: j “We've got to run away, Sally, before the family comes home. I hate to leave him—down there—if he's only hurt. But I'll be damned if I stay here and get us both sent to jail just to ease a pain for that beast, if he isn’t dead, may be having! Oh, God, I hope I didn't kill him! I just went crazy when he called you that name— Will you come, Sally, or do you want to stay and face them with me? Whatever’s best for you—” Sally Ford did not hesitate for a moment. Her blue eyes were full of trust and adoration as she answered: “I'll go with you. David, I knew I'd have to run away. I'm all packed.” “All right.” David spoke rapidly. “I’ll fix up a small bundle, too. You get your things and leave the house as quickly as possible. Cut across the orchard to the corn field and wait for me where we were sitting the other night. I'll join you almost by the time you get there. But I want you to leave first, just in case they come back before I can get away. Now. run!” Sally obeyed, somehow forcing her muscles to carry out David's commands. but the tears were coming so fast that she bumped unseeingly into apple and peach trees as she ran through the orchard, the brown paper parcel of clothes clutched tightly to her bosom. Twice she clashed the tears from her eyes, glanced fearfully about, and listened but she saw and heard nothing. The Loosen Up That Cold With Musterole Have Musterole handy when a cold starts. It has all of the advantages of grandmother's mustard plaster without the burn. You feel a warm tingle as the healing ointment penetrates the pores, then a soothing, cooling sensation and quick relief. Made of pure oil of mustard and i other simple ingredients. Musterole ; is recommended my many nurses and doctors. Try Musterole for bronchitis, sore throat, stiff neck, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, croup, asthma, neuralgia, congestion, pains and aches of the back or joints, sore muscles, sprains, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of the chest. It may prevent pneumonia and “flu.”
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sun was getting low in the west, slanting in golden dust-laden beams through the rows of apple trees. When she reached the shelter of the com stalks she went more slowly for her heart was pounding sickeningly. Just before she reached the end of the field she paused, opened her bundle with shaking hands, drew out the dark blue linen dress and put it on over the blue-and-white gingham uniform of the orphanage. She was retying her bundle when she caught the faint sound of footsteps running toward her between rows of com. x David was hatless. His eyes were wide, unsmiling, but his lips managed an upturning of the corners to reassure her. “Sorry—to be so long,” he panted. “But I telephoned a doctor that Carson had been—hurt—and asked | him to cbmc over. I didn't answer | when he asked who was calling. Told | him Carson had slipped from the roof.” “I'm awfully glad you did, David. It was like you. Shall we go now?” David looked down at her in wonder, and his eyes and lips were very tender. “What a brave kid you are. Sally! What a darn nice ! little thing you arc! But I've been I thinking hard, honey. We can't 3 Minutes Ends the Worst Corns Thro minutes rniJs the toughest, most painful corn or callous when you use shiir-off. This amazing new remedy stops all pain the instant it is applied; positively will not irritate or affect healthy skin, but so quickly softens the corn or callous that in a few minutes you can easily take it out—root anil all. Why use old-time propj arations which so often irritate anil n quire several days treatment? Get , shur-off at ITooL s Dependable Drug | Stores or any good druggist, follow the simple directions and enjoy real foot comfort at once, Shur-Off I Ends Corns in 3 Minutes
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run away together—far, that is. I'll have to take you back to the Home.” (To Be Continued) In the next chapter Sally meets an old friend in anew setting. Local Motorist Released l’,y United Press CLINTON, Ind., March 27.—Harry Doyle, Indianapolis, who had been in the city jail here a week, unable to give SSOO bond, because his automobile was said to have struck a car belonging to a Clinton man, was turned loose when the man whose car was alleged to have been wrecked failed to appear against the defendant. Doyle pleaded not guilty when arrested. Hoosier Heads Miami Police B<i Times Special CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind., March 27.—Hollis Arnold, former Ci-aw-fordsville man, has been appointed police chief of Miami, Fla., succeeding Leslie Quigg, indicted a few days ago on a murder charge.
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Greszczyk, 22, who repeated the story he told last Friday which resulted in Luczkowski’s arrest as he waited for his friend to meet him to aid in burying mutilated body of Mrs. Luczkowski, which was stuffed in a box at the couple’s home. Just before he was taken from his cell to the courtroom, the husband remarked to heporters: “I wish I cold see my wife. I don't know whether she is dead or not. All I know is what the officers have told me, although I did see the box. I don’t know who could have done it unless it was Martin.” Proposes Plymouth Airport By Times Special PLYMOUTH. Ind., March 27.—A committee has been appointed by a group of aviation enthusiasts to consider possibility of establishing an airport here. It is proposed to form a club of about 200 members to back the project.
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